By Michael Taylor, Flinders University.
Home alone? Hardly. Our homes are positively swarming with creatures of all kinds. In our new series, we’ll be profiling the “hidden housemates” that live with us.
Our offices and homes are full of airborne spores from fungi, and for the most part we never even notice them.
Whether you like to think about it or not, you’re covered in microorganisms. Absolutely teeming with them from head to toe. Your body is covered and filled with bacteria called commensals, which inhabit the microscopic valleys of your skin and recesses of your gut. These organisms for the most part never cause you any harm, and in fact protect you from being colonised by disease-causing organisms.
In the same way that you’re a walking zoo of microbes, the world around you is peppered with invisible microorganisms.
Ancient relationship
This isn’t a new relationship though. Humans have been cohabiting with fungi for a very long time.
Ancient Egyptian bakers and brewers were harnessing natural yeasts more than 4,000 years ago, but it was only in the 1850s that we realised it was microbes that were responsible for leavening bread and making alcohol.
We’ve also known for a very long time that unpreserved foods spoil, growing conspicuously fuzzy tufts of blue and green mould. The kinds of moulds that make our bread and make forgotten oranges go fluffy are really the weeds of the fungal world.
Penicillium (this is the same fungus involved in the discovery of the first antibiotics, but that’s another story) and Aspergillus are the microscopic equivalent of soursobs and dandelions, and look fairly similar in a lot of ways.
Top Comments
"Generally a healthy mixture of fungi can
indicate a healthy home, and I promise you that life is better with
fungi in it than without."
So, despite the implication in the headline, my home's not killing me then. Just more alarmist clickbait.