Airborne Bacteria Make It Rain, Researchers Find — It’s always something weird that changes everything.

The fact that bacteria could cause snow and rain was discovered almost by accident in the 1970s by study co-author David Sands, a Montana State University plant pathologist, during his research on Pseudomonas syringae, a microbe that causes ice to form on leaves.

Unable to discover the source of repeatedly infected fields, Sands exasperatedly took to the skies. He did the scientific equivalent of dragging a cup through the clouds — and lo and behold, there was P. syringae.

P. syringae is not the only biological ice nucleator, but it is the most common, and all varieties share a protein structure that provides a scaffold for free-floating water molecules. Once bound to the bacteria and to each other, the water vapors are able to freeze, and eventually fall back to Earth.

In a pure state, water vapors freeze at temperatures below -35 degrees Celsius. Nucleators allow this to happen in warmer conditions, and Christner’s study found that bacteria are the most common warm-temperature nucleators of all.

Researchers never realized bacteria could be so widespread in the clouds, said Christner, because the technologies used to measure fine dust — traditionally seen as the most important nucleator — ignore microbe-sized particles.

“It’s not that these atmospheric scientists are idiots — they’re not,” he said. “But biological nucleators were not previously recognized as being that abundant or important. They’re going to have to revise that.”




  1. Awake says:

    Two miles long, and designed so that your connecting flight is always on the opposite end of the terminal.

  2. Awake says:

    ^^^ Ooops… wrong thread… meant for the airport thing.

  3. tomdennis says:

    It always rains when the leave get dusty. That’s a fact of life.

  4. Balbas says:

    Everytime a Central Park butterfly sneezes, a typhoon forms two months later over Tokyo.

  5. green says:

    I thought China was responsible….

  6. TakeIT2 says:

    Yea, I saw this story on Wired. And the first too things I thought about were Ulcers and that I had just been out taking pictures of clouds.
    Ulcers because we found that bacteria was the prominant cause of that dysfunction, and maybe there is a similar thing hapening with the weather.


    Well you can see why I was thinking about taking pictures of clouds.


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