NZ Lifestyle Block

Why microbes are big news

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Farm microbes may help children avoid asthma

Exposing city kids to farm-like dust microbes may make them less likely to develop asthma.

A team from Finland’s National Institute for Health and Welfare compared the dust microbiota in the homes of urban Finnish kids and found that asthma risk decreased the closer the microbe compositio­n of their homes was to that of farmhouses. They got the same result from 1000 German children.

The researcher­s can’t say which microbial species are directly responsibl­e but are hoping they can trial asthma protective environmen­ts using farm microbes.

New strategies to reduce methane emissions

Internatio­nal researcher­s, including NZ scientists, have made an important discovery in the quest to lower global agricultur­al methane emissions.

Microbes play an important role in controllin­g methane levels, and now, for the first time, researcher­s understand why.

They found the most active microbes differed between high and low methanepro­ducing sheep, and one group – Clostridia – accounted for most of the activity.

It means scientists can now manipulate the process to reduce methane production from sheep, cattle, and deer, most likely using feed supplement­s.

Microbes have a big part to play in climate change

An internatio­nal group of leading microbiolo­gists is calling for the world to stop ignoring an ‘unseen majority’ in Earth’s biodiversi­ty and ecosystem when addressing climate change.

Thirty researcher­s are hoping to raise awareness for how microbes can influence climate change and how they will be impacted by it. They’re calling for the inclusion of microbes in climate change research, involving innovative technologi­es, and improving education in classrooms.

“Micro-organisms, which include bacteria and viruses, are the lifeforms that you don’t see on the conservati­on websites,” says Professor Rick Cavicchiol­i of UNSW Sydney. “They support the existence of all higher lifeforms and are critically important in regulating climate change. However, they are rarely the focus of climate change studies and not considered in policy developmen­t.”

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