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7/31/2019 What’s In A Cloud? More Than You Think
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/whats-in-a-cloud-more-than-you-think 1/3
What’s In A Cloud? More Than You Think
“The amount of microbial life present in the cloud droplets that make upa winter storm is amazing.”
- Gary Franc, microbiologist and plant pathologist at the University of
Wyoming, in The Clouds Are Alive by Douglas Fox, Discover , April 2012
Here’s an easy question. At what temperature does water freeze orthaw?
If you answered zero Celsius (32 Fahrenheit) you would be with the
majority. If you are savvy enough to know about salt water, such as in
oceans, you will know that sea water may remain liquid down to -4C.And salt on icy winter roads will melt down to -4C. That puts you in a
minority.
If you answered anywhere between -40 (C or F, they coincide at that
temperature) and +10C you would be technically correct--”technically” because even though this is true in nature it’s not a fact you would want
to argue in court, or even with your mother. It’s not simple.
Water in the stratosphere has been found still liquid at nearly -40 and
ice crystals have been seen forming at +10C in some clouds. No, I amnot lying to you. Keep reading so you will learn how these are possible.
First of all, what do you think clouds are made of ? Water droplets, yes.
(Not steam, which is water as a gas, and that is technically invisible.)Water droplets tend to form around dust particles in the air. Generallyspeaking, when you get smacked in the face with rain drops each one
has at least one particle of dust in it.
Who cares about the dust? Maybe you if you realize that the dust mayhave travelled the world more than you have. A dust particle in a
droplet of water in a cloud in North America could well have come from
Africa’s Sahara Desert. Or from China’s Gobi Desert. Or, who knows?
The well read among us will know that “foreign” dust could havebrought along with it microbes from its land or origin. These microbes,
blown in the wind, hitchhiking on dust, might deliver infectious disease
right to your nose without your ever owning a passport.
True, the likelihood of your dying of a disease blown from a differentcontinent than your own, on dust, is small. But microbes in the air are
far more prevalent that you may imagine. As our quote at the beginning
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said, the air is full of microbial life.
Most of it will do you no harm. But so little study has been done on thissubject that we have no way to know today what diseases and
afflictions we and those we know may get that may have begun
thousands of kilometres away from our home. We may accept thatSARS and swine flu are delivered peer-to-peer by human travellers, but
not that other diseases might be brought to us in the air. From a distantcontinent.
Kimberley Prather, an atmospheric chemist who heads her own research
group at University of California San Diego, is not shy about getting up
into the clouds (even rumbling ones) to find out what is going on inside.What she has learned is enough to make your jaw drop.
Think about it: what makes ice form from water, other than the
obvious, ambient temperature? Why do some clouds drop rain while
others don’t? The answer in both cases is microbes.
Bacteria, algae and fungi get swept up by wind at ground level andmake their way into the air as high as jetliners. “There’s a whole
ecosystem going on in the clouds that’s largely undefined,” says Gary
Franc.
Two million tons of bacteria, 55 million tons of fungal spores and anunguessable (at this time) quantity of algae make their way into the
atmosphere each year. Never mind pollution in the air, this is nature inaction. A great deal of study will be needed to determine what effectsthese have on our weather, on next year’s harvest, even on our
personal health.
Ice will form by itself from water (so far as we know today), but thishappens very slowly (like ice cubes in your fridge freezer). How can this
happen so quickly in the atmosphere when ice crystals form and snow
falls to the ground?
Professor Prather and others have shown that the bacteriumPseudomonas syringae has a gene in its DNA that prompts ice to form
from water droplets. You read that right. At least one variety of bacteria
can cause water to freeze into ice by activating a gene in its body.
Why is this important? Ice crystals are heavier than water droplets. Icefalls, delivering water (as it melts) to the land below. If cloud seeding
silver iodide were loaded up with P. syringae bacteria when sprayed into
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clouds, drought-dried land could be persuaded to become fertile again.
That means more food to feed the seven billion (and growing) of us onthe planet today.
It also could mean new ways to control the spread of diseases thatseem mysterious and stubborn to us now.
Stay tuned, the most populous life form on the planet, bacteria, have
much to teach us.
Bill Allin is the author of Turning It Around: Causes and Cures for
Today’s Epidemic Social Problems, a guidebook for teachers andparents who want to raise well balanced children who can have good
lives, not just good jobs.Learn more at http://billallin.com