Earth Microbiome Project to Catalogue World’s Microbes

An initiative called the Earth Microbiome Project, led by Jack Gilbert at Argonne National Laboratory and including scientists all over the world, is tackling the massive task of cataloguing the DNA of all those microbes.

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100 trillion microbes live in each of our bodies. A billion trillion trillion exist in just the oceans. Adding in air, trees, plants, dirt and animals makes that number nearly unfathomable.

An initiative called the Earth Microbiome Project, led by Jack Gilbert at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory and including scientists all over the world, is tackling the massive task of cataloguing the DNA of all those microbes. The knowledge could potentially one day help us understand climate change, increase world food production and even avoid unnecessary surgeries.

Microbes play a tremendous role in human health, but what we know about them covers just the tiniest tip of the iceberg. They also perform 99% of the nutrient and gas cycling in the world; this cycling is vitally important to the planet and by extension our food, our industry and the economy.

"For example, what a cubic meter of soil, full of microbes, does in one day—breaking down chemicals, storing and releasing carbon, creating usable nutrients for plants—would cost us $500 billion to do by human methods," Gilbert said. "We want to learn their tricks."

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