ALMOST everywhere you go on Earth, you
encounter alien species that were introduced – often inadvertently – by
humans. Now it seems possible that we have done the same to Mars.
Despite stringent rules designed to prevent contamination, Earth
microbes may have reached the Red Planet.
That might look like a blow for efforts
to detect Martian life. But, ironically, it may end up being the
opposite. Some planetary scientists argue that if contamination is
already likely, we should now throw caution to the wind (see "Overprotection may be hampering hunt for Mars life"). The strict rules actually hamper the search for life by adding unnecessary costs to missions, they say.
Is there a case for relaxing the
rules? Perhaps. If Mars has its own life, it should be different enough
from Earth life for us to recognise it. If it doesn't, any bugs we find
will be recognisably terrestrial. In either case, Earth life will
struggle to colonise Mars. Recent arrivals are unlikely to thrive in the
harsh conditions, and the possibility of them outcompeting any natives
is about as likely as parrots colonising Antarctica and ousting the
penguins.
However, many life-detecting
experiments rely on picking up whiffs of gas or traces of chemicals
rather than finding life itself. Any relaxation of the laws must rule
out the chances of earthly contamination leading to infuriating false
positives.
There's another factor too. While
governments of most spacefaring nations have agreed to abide by the
rules, the law is unclear on private companies such as SpaceX and Mars
One, who are hoping to beat national agencies to Mars. Mars One has
declared that it will play by the rules if it ever succeeds in starting
the first human colony on Mars. But others may not follow suit.
Elsewhere in the solar system, though,
sterilisation rules remain vital – especially for icy moons such as
Jupiter's Europa and Saturn's Titan, which are the best hopes for
finding an independent origin of life.
If a spacecraft crashed or melted
through Europa's shell into the ocean beneath, it could have fatal
consequences for everything living there. The only thing worse than not
finding life – if it is there – would be finding it after we've
destroyed it.
This article appeared in print under the headline "Is there Earth life on Mars?"
Sorce
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