Bacteria Outweigh Animals By HOW MUCH?! Measuring Earth's Biomass

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Greetings home planet and all hail our supreme Zorgdorg.

Mission update:

I have completed my biological analysis of this planet’s life forms.

There’s a lot of something calledcows”.

As well asants”.

Glad our home planet doesn’t have those.

WOW!

So many.

I have concluded this planet is actually run by small birds calledchickens”.

They outnumber the humans 2 to 1.

HAHAHAHAHA and these humans think they are in charge

HAHAHA actually the humans do kill a lot of stuff.

Wish me luck.

More research to come.

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What would it look like if we, or aliens posing as YouTubers, took a census of all Earth’s

life, put it on a scaleto see what dominates, and if were changing it?

There are a lot of humans on Earth -- about 7.6 billion, in fact.

But there are actually way more chickens, 19 billion!

And way way more fishthose estimates are in the trillions.

We humans actually only make up one one-hundredth of one percent of all life on Earth, by mass.

That hasn’t stopped us from having a big-time impact though.

Sure, weve altered the landscape which is actually visible from space, and weve

literally moved mountains, but there’s also an impact that’s a bit harder to see: all

the death.

Since our species spread across the globe, weve trampled out 84% of animals and over

half of all plant life.

Sheesh, so what’s left?

Counting individual animals is hard and boring and would take a really long time, so instead

scientists often measure something called biomass, basically how much living mass there

is in some group of species.

We measure biomass in gigatons of carbon.

This is helpful when you want to compare species of different sizes.

For example, 3,100 mice have the same biomass as one human.

Or 15,312 Humpback whales have the same biomass as your mom. <cue airhorns> REAL MATURE GUYS

Scientists recently found our planet hosts a total of 550 gigatons of living carbon.

So how does it stack up?

Let’s start with animals.

Of all animals, mammals and birds only make up 8.5%.

And among that, 60% is livestock, mostly cattle and pigs.

Humans?

Were more than a third (36%) of all birds and mammals, but were only 3% of the animal

tally.

Arthropodsthe insects, spiders, crustaceans and other things with exoskeletonsfar

outweigh any other animal group, making up 60% of the animal kingdom.

I mean, the termites alone nearly outweigh all 7.6 billion of us humans!

But altogether, animals are a tiny 0.3% of Earth’s living mass.

Mushrooms and other fungi are six times more massive than all the animals.

There’s actually a colony of mycelium -- an underground fungusfungifungusi -- in

Oregon that stretches 1,665 football fields in area.

It’s considered the largest organism on Earth.

However, even fungi and fun-gals are just a tiny fraction of biomass compared to another

group, one that’s absolutely massive despite being mini.

A typical bacterial cell is a tenth the size of your typical animal cell.

Yet together, bacteria are a whopping 35 times more massive than all animals put together.

Bacteria make up most of the small world, but the other groups of microscopic critters

each individually outweigh birds and mammals (0.3% of total B) on the biomass scale (archaea

(1.3%), protists (0.7%), and viruses (0.04%)).

But bacteria aren’t the biomass-masters.

The true rulers of Earth’s biosphere?

Plants.

Our green friends make up a whopping ~83% of all biomass.

This result surprised scientists, because we tend to think of bacteria playing the biggest

role in Earth’s biosphere.

But when you think about how heavy a tree is, and the fact that there’s 3 trillion

trees on Earth, their top spot makes sense.

But then you think about the fact that they did all that by eating air and

Although most of the Earth’s surface is covered by ocean, turns out most of life,

86%, lives on land.

It might be a blue planet, but it’s a green biosphere.

And even more surprising, there’s almost 12 times more life deep below ground, mostly

microbes, than there is in the ocean.

So that’s how life on Earth measures up.

Thing is, that tally used to look pretty different.

Humans and our close relatives have only been around about 6 million years, but in that

short time weve managed to decimate life on this planet.

From 50,000 to 3,000 years ago, half of Earth’s large mammal species died out, due in part

to human activity.

Whaling alone decreased marine animal biomass fivefold since the 1700s.

Things like deforestation, hunting, and destroying habitats have knocked down terrestrial animals

by a factor of six since we showed up.

And don’t even get me started on climate change.

Actually, DO get me startedand go check out our new climate and environment channel

called Hot Mess :) Link in the description.

Where were we?

Humans have also added new life to the mixthe planet now hosts more livestock than

wild animals.

To feed ourselves and our animals, weve permanently cultivated nearly 600,000 square

miles.

If you add in pastures and stuff, about 18.9 million square miles has been turned over

to agricultureand our livestock are hogging 68% of that.

Human population growth is slowing, but it’s still going up.

By 2050 well have something like 9.7 billion people aboard spaceship Earth, and who knows

what that additional human biomass will do to the planet.

If we keep adding more cows and chickens and people, lions and tigers and bears might only

exist in storybooks!

Plants, bacteria, and chickens, though, will probably still be here.

Stay curious.