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The phoenix isn’t the only critter to survive the flames

The phoenix isn’t the only critter to survive the flames
Bethany brookshire 2025-08-22 13:00:00

At the end ⁢of its life, the phoenix goes out in style.⁢ With a loud cry, the crimson bird bursts into flames. ‌Then from ⁤a pile of ash,a baby bird pokes out its tiny head. The phoenix has burned,but it is born anew. This story is common to ancient greek and Egyptian ⁣mythology. And references to​ the ‌phoenix span‌ fiction ‌today, from⁣ harry Potter to⁤ the anime series One Piece.

There are⁣ no real phoenixes hiding anywhere. But science has revealed ‌that some living things can take quite a bit ⁤of heat. And like the phoenix,‌ a few are ‌even born from ‌the ashes.

Some single-celled life-forms known as hyperthermophiles like it ​hot. Thes microbes live in places​ such as hot springs and deep-sea⁤ vents.Some are bacteria. But the toughest, hottest of all are members of the archaea, ‍one of​ the three domains of life.

Not all ⁤archaea ​love the heat, but the ones studied ⁤by Robert Kelly, a microbiologist at North Carolina State University in Raleigh,‍ do. ​The upper limit for these hardy cells is 120° Celsius (250° Fahrenheit) — well ⁤above the boiling point of water. If⁢ you​ step into the hot springs where they ⁣live,Kelly says,“your skin ‌will ⁣basically just fall ⁢off your bones.” At⁤ temperatures that high, he explains, meat — including human muscle — begins to cook. Proteins fall apart.

But archaea ‍have evolved molecular tricks that keep proteins stable ​in these environments. Kelly and his colleagues have found thousands‍ of tiny relationships between molecules that help⁢ hold archaea cells together as ⁤temperatures soar.

“Nature has a lot of‌ very subtle things [it does] to stabilize a⁣ protein,”‍ he says.

Nature also offers heat protection to‍ animals ​that are much larger than a single cell.

In South Africa, beetles⁤ called weevils live in the fynbos — a⁤ dry, shrub-filled area that’s prone to‌ wildfires. ⁢Entomologist Marion Javal was on a hike there with her friends several years ‍ago. As they crossed an area that recently ⁢had burned, she ‌got inspired.

“We saw a bunch of very tiny weevils walking on the floor. But, like, very, very small insects that​ are‌ not really able to fly,” says ​Javal, of the Institute of Research for⁢ Progress in Montpellier, France. “We started wondering how and why ⁣they were here.”

weevils able to fly would be ⁤able to escape a burn.⁤ But those that‌ can’t fly are stuck, Javal ⁤says. Insects​ are ectothermic — their bodies are the same temperature as the ‌air around them. As the air heats up during⁢ a wildfire, they do too. So how do flightless bugs survive the burn?

Javal and her colleagues collected weevils from the area and tested how much heat they could take. One species, ocladius costiger, could survive at up to⁢ 52.6° C⁢ (126.7° F). Another, Cryptolarynx variabilis, lived at up to ⁣53.4° C (128.1° F),the ‍researchers reported in 2022 in Ecological Entomology.

“It was ⁢quite⁢ unexpected to try ​to find​ such high temperature for these very tiny weevils that we had⁤ in the study,” Javal says.

Like the ⁣archaea,these beetles might have some molecular⁢ adaptations in their cells that help them survive,she notes. Or perhaps the⁢ bugs ‍dig down into ‍the soil to flee the flames.

Other weevil species find safety in another life-form⁤ that can withstand the burn, Javal notes.These beetles lay eggs inside plants with tough, woody exteriors that act⁢ as natural fire protection. When the wildfires peter out, the weevil eggs hatch — like a ⁣phoenix from the ashes.

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