Rain contains vitamin B12.
Rain Contains Vitamin B12
Next time you're caught in a downpour, you're technically being showered with vitamins. Rain contains vitamin B12, a fact confirmed by scientist Bruce C. Parker in a 1968 study published in Nature. While you won't meet your daily nutritional needs by drinking rainwater, the presence of this essential nutrient in precipitation reveals something fascinating about our atmosphere.
How B12 Gets Into Clouds
Vitamin B12 doesn't just appear in rain by magic. It's produced by bacteria—microscopic organisms floating through the air and living in water droplets within clouds. As raindrops form and fall, they collect these microorganisms and their metabolic byproducts, including B12.
The vitamin makes its way into the atmosphere through several pathways: soil particles blown into the air, sea spray from oceans, and even bacteria living on plant surfaces. Once airborne, these B12-producing microbes become part of the water cycle.
The Numbers
Before you start collecting rainwater as a B12 supplement, here's the reality check: the concentrations are incredibly small. Studies have found:
- Pond water: 60 to 2,000 nanograms per liter
- Seawater: undetectable to 200 nanograms per liter
- Rainwater: even lower than both
Your daily B12 requirement? About 2,400 nanograms. You'd need to drink an absurd amount of rainwater to get any nutritional benefit, and that's before considering all the other reasons drinking rainwater is a bad idea.
Why It Matters
While rainwater's B12 content won't help humans much, it plays a crucial role in aquatic ecosystems. About 70% of freshwater and marine planktonic algae require vitamin B12 to survive. These microscopic organisms form the base of aquatic food chains, supporting everything from tiny zooplankton to massive whales.
For these algae, rain is one source of this essential vitamin, along with bacterial activity in the water itself and B12 absorbed by clay particles washing in from soil. Without adequate B12, algal populations crash, and entire ecosystems can collapse.
The takeaway? Rain is more complex than just water falling from the sky. It's a delivery system for nutrients, minerals, and even vitamins, connecting the atmosphere to life below in ways we're still discovering.