DAILY STAR
The Earth is in the middle of a mass extinction, but the most endangered organisms aren’t mighty elephants or gigantic whales… but the tiny creatures living in your gut.
There are some 30 trillion cells in the average human body, but the human microbiome consists of a further 39 trillion microbial cells that include bacteria, viruses and fungi.
Adrian Egli, director of the Institute of Medical Microbiology at the University of Zurich, is seeking to preserve human gut bacteria by freezing poo samples from all over the world in a unique archive called the Microbiota Vault.
Our changing lifestyles, with more of us moving into cities, are having a dramatic effect on the communities of tiny creatures living inside us – and those changes could one day threaten our survival.
“People are very aware of biodiversity, the reductions in plants and animals,” Adrian explained to The Times.
“If the elephant goes extinct, in terms of your own health you’re not having an obvious problem. If your microbiome is disturbed in a certain way, it can have tremendous consequences.”
The widespread use of antibiotics, as well as the increasing consumption of fast food worldwide, is going a long way to disturb the delicate communities that exist inside every one of us.