Bacteriophages: The Most Common Life-Like Form on Earth
			
		
		
			Credit:  
Wikipedia; 
Insert: Mike Jones
		
		
			There are more bacteriophages on Earth than any other life-like form.  
These small 
viruses are not clearly a form of life, 
since when not attached to bacteria they are completely dormant.  
Bacteriophages 
attack and eat 
bacteria 
and have likely been doing so for over 3 billion years ago. 
Although initially discovered early last century, the tremendous abundance of 
phages 
was realized more recently when it was found that a single drop of common seawater typically contains millions of them.  
Extrapolating, 
phages 
are likely to be at least a billion billion (sic) times more numerous than humans.
Pictured above is an 
electron micrograph of over a dozen bacteriophages attached to a single bacterium.  
Phages are very 
small -- 
it would take about a million of them laid end-to-end to span even one millimeter.  
The ability to kill bacteria makes phages a 
potential ally 
against bacteria that cause human disease, although 
bacteriophages 
are not yet well enough understood to be in wide spread medical use.