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Only two species can survive in Great Salt Lake? Scientist says — hold my Nalgene

AILSA CHANG, HOST:

Julie Jung moved to Salt Lake City, Utah, a few years ago, and while she was out hiking around the Great Salt Lake one day, she saw a sign.

JULIE JUNG: And it says there's only two animals that can survive these really salty waters.

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

Immediately, she wanted to prove the sign wrong.

JUNG: Challenge accepted.

KELLY: Jung, a biologist, was working on her postdoc.

JUNG: I had just joined a nematode lab. Nematodes are everywhere. If anyone has seen "Dune," (laughter) I think they're, like, the real-world inspiration for the giant sandworms in "Dune."

CHANG: Nematodes are mostly microscopic, with a reputation for sticking it out in harsh environments.

JUNG: People had found nematodes in all these crazy places - miles underground in a South African gold mine, in McMurdo Valley. So some of the coldest and driest soils on Earth, in Antarctica.

KELLY: So Jung and her team got to work.

UNIDENTIFIED RESEARCHER: It's so salty.

(LAUGHTER)

JUNG: We'd take little shovels full of soil, and we put them in, like, takeout containers. That is what we learned is, like, the most convenient to take home samples 'cause they don't leak as much.

CHANG: I never thought of that. At first, there were no signs of worms when they looked under the microscope. But then they switched up their methods and pulled samples from different parts of the lake.

KELLY: And when they got back to the lab...

JUNG: We were, like, still covered in salt. All our pants were like cardboard at this point 'cause it had - all the salt on it had dried. But we were still in lab (ph) dirty and sort of stinky at 9:00 p.m., but we found our first worm and got super excited about it.

KELLY: That's right - sitting in a petri dish was the third species able to live in the Great Salt Lake.

JUNG: They are, in my mind, adorable. They're usually smaller than one millimeter, even. So you can see it with your naked eye, but a microscope is very helpful. They are often fuzzy and kind of covered with bacteria.

CHANG: But this warm and fuzzy worm looked different. So different, Jung thought it could be its own species of nematode.

KELLY: To prove it, her team spent three years collecting and sequencing as many of the worms as they could find.

JUNG: So we basically took a lot of really beautiful photos of this tiny - teeny, tiny worm, collected all this evidence to say, hey, like, there's no other worm that has this character.

CHANG: And once the evidence panned out, they also had to name it.

JUNG: It's a big decision, I guess, if it's your first new species - what to name it.

KELLY: Jung and her colleagues spoke to tribal leaders of the Northwest (ph) Band of the Shoshone Nation, whose ancestral lands cover the Great Salt Lake. They named their nematode after the Shoshone word for worm - wo'aabi.

JUNG: And so that's what we decided what the species name would be - so Diplolaimelloides woaabi.

CHANG: Today, Jung's a professor in Utah at Weber State University, but now she has another title as well.

JUNG: A worm discoverer, yes (laughter).

KELLY: Oh, yes. You're listening to ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Henry Larson
Justine Kenin
Justine Kenin is an editor on All Things Considered. She joined NPR in 1999 as an intern. Nothing makes her happier than getting a book in the right reader's hands – most especially her own.