What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect

Extremophiles are specialists which colonise special niches in these extreme environments due to there adaptation capacities attained during the evolution of life. Some examples of extremophiles and their potential to deal with harsh conditions as well as the characterisation of their niches will be...

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Main Authors: de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul, de la Torre Noetzel, R., Onofri, S., Ott, S.
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/68112/
id ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:68112
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:68112 2024-05-19T07:31:50+00:00 What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul de la Torre Noetzel, R. Onofri, S. Ott, S. 2010 https://elib.dlr.de/68112/ unknown de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul und de la Torre Noetzel, R. und Onofri, S. und Ott, S. (2010) What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect. In: COSPAR 10 final program. COSPAR 2010, 2010-07-18 - 2010-07-25, Bremen, Deutschland. Institut für Planetenforschung Konferenzbeitrag NonPeerReviewed 2010 ftdlr 2024-04-25T00:19:03Z Extremophiles are specialists which colonise special niches in these extreme environments due to there adaptation capacities attained during the evolution of life. Some examples of extremophiles and their potential to deal with harsh conditions as well as the characterisation of their niches will be presented. Based on observations and results obtained in the 10th German Antarctic North Victoria Land Expedition (GANOVEX X) in the area of the Transantarctic Mountains led by the German Geosciences and Resource Research Society(BGR) and during an environment characterisation campaign of the European Alps and the Spanish Mountains\Sierra de Gredos" supported by the German Ministry of Economy and Technology (BMWi) a global transect from temperate Alpine regions to Mediterranean mountains and Polar Mountain regions can be analysed. Due to a summary of these results we are able to compare different strategies of colonisation in different habitats of the global mountain transect by cosmopolitan and endemic species as there are, the colonisation of rocks, fissures, cracks, polygon forming substrates, permafrost and glaciers. Data of UV B-, PAR- and IR-radiation measurements, humidity and temperature as well as the activity of microorganisms are accomplishing with more details the habitat characterisation and may give relevant information on probably niches for life on other planets as e.g. the planet Mars and may give answers on the question what is a habitable environment. These results will also form the basis of a series of new space experiments on satellites or on the International Space Station (ISS) and furthermore may lead to progress in probes- and rover-development for particular \hardly" accessible terrains. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic permafrost Victoria Land German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library
institution Open Polar
collection German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library
op_collection_id ftdlr
language unknown
topic Institut für Planetenforschung
spellingShingle Institut für Planetenforschung
de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
de la Torre Noetzel, R.
Onofri, S.
Ott, S.
What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect
topic_facet Institut für Planetenforschung
description Extremophiles are specialists which colonise special niches in these extreme environments due to there adaptation capacities attained during the evolution of life. Some examples of extremophiles and their potential to deal with harsh conditions as well as the characterisation of their niches will be presented. Based on observations and results obtained in the 10th German Antarctic North Victoria Land Expedition (GANOVEX X) in the area of the Transantarctic Mountains led by the German Geosciences and Resource Research Society(BGR) and during an environment characterisation campaign of the European Alps and the Spanish Mountains\Sierra de Gredos" supported by the German Ministry of Economy and Technology (BMWi) a global transect from temperate Alpine regions to Mediterranean mountains and Polar Mountain regions can be analysed. Due to a summary of these results we are able to compare different strategies of colonisation in different habitats of the global mountain transect by cosmopolitan and endemic species as there are, the colonisation of rocks, fissures, cracks, polygon forming substrates, permafrost and glaciers. Data of UV B-, PAR- and IR-radiation measurements, humidity and temperature as well as the activity of microorganisms are accomplishing with more details the habitat characterisation and may give relevant information on probably niches for life on other planets as e.g. the planet Mars and may give answers on the question what is a habitable environment. These results will also form the basis of a series of new space experiments on satellites or on the International Space Station (ISS) and furthermore may lead to progress in probes- and rover-development for particular \hardly" accessible terrains.
format Conference Object
author de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
de la Torre Noetzel, R.
Onofri, S.
Ott, S.
author_facet de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
de la Torre Noetzel, R.
Onofri, S.
Ott, S.
author_sort de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
title What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect
title_short What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect
title_full What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect
title_fullStr What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect
title_full_unstemmed What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect
title_sort what is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect
publishDate 2010
url https://elib.dlr.de/68112/
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
permafrost
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
permafrost
Victoria Land
op_relation de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul und de la Torre Noetzel, R. und Onofri, S. und Ott, S. (2010) What is a habitable environment? - answers from abservations of a global transect. In: COSPAR 10 final program. COSPAR 2010, 2010-07-18 - 2010-07-25, Bremen, Deutschland.
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