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Friday, November 16, 2012

‘Rainforest’ of bacteria lives in our belly buttons

London: Navels harbour an ecosystem of bacteria which is similar in their biodiversity to the world's rainforests, a new study has claimed. 

    US researchers found 2,368 species of bacteria, 1,458 of which may be new to science, after two years of literal navel gazing. 
    Just eight of these species were found in more than 70% of individuals sampled. However, questions remain as to what factors govern which species will be found on which people, the Daily Mail reported. 
    "The common, abundant species are from a relatively small number of evolutionary lines, indicating that they have evolved traits that make them at home on human skin," said Rob Dunn of North Carolina State University. "However, we are still trying to figure out what determines which of these species are found in a givenperson's belly button," he said. 
    "We've looked at sex, age, ethnicity and a number of other factors — none of them 
are predictive of which species live in that person," Dunn added. 
    Dunn and his team swabbed more than 500 belly buttons over the past two years, but concentrate on just 60 individuals for their study published in the journal PLoS One. 
    The researchers launched their project in part to investigate claims over recent years that the collection of organisms on human skin forms our first line of defence against pathogens. 
    "We know that without these microbes our immune systems won't function properly," Dunn said. PTI

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