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Scientists discover 662 new microbes — in 95 belly buttons

By | July 4, 2011, 8:50 PM PDT

The Belly Button Biodiversity Project sounds like a cartoon version of a science experiment, but a venture by that name is turning up serious discoveries.

In February, biologists and science communicators from North Carolina State University and the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences began collecting swabs of bacteria from people’s belly buttons to find out what microorganisms their bodies were hosting.

The results

After getting belly button swabs at science events in North Carolina and from science bloggers, the researchers have finished their first analysis.

In just 95 cultures, they’ve found 1,400 bacterial strains, 662 of which cannot even be grouped to the biological classification of family, “which strongly suggests that they are new to science,” team leader Jiri Hulcr of North Carolina State University told New Scientist. (The order of biological classification goes kingdom, phylum/division, class, order, family, genus, species.)

While it appears belly button bacteria can be diverse, a core group of about 40 species accounts for about 80% of all the bacteria in our belly buttons. This is astounding considering that the world’s microbes outnumber all the species in the animal kingdom.

The New York Times science writer and Discover blogger Carl Zimmer found that his belly button is home to 53 species, which he was told is a “whopping” number.

Only a small fraction of my belly button bacteria were common among the other 89 volunteers. The microbes I share with most other volunteers tend to be ordinary skin dwellers that are typically harmless … But out of 53 species, 35 were present in only 10 or fewer other volunteers. And 17 species in my navel didn’t show up in anyone else. In the column for notes in [the researcher's] spreadsheet, he’s annotated these species with scientific descriptions like “weird one” and “totally crazy.”

It seems Zimmer was not the only subject with strange belly button bacteria: Incredibly, a few sequences of DNA were so unusual that the only conclusion the scientists could make about them were that they are bacteria.

The analysis

The researchers limited themselves to analyzing DNA from bacteria, choosing to exclude fungi, viruses and other microorganisms.

But just identifying the bacteria alone is a challenge. The scientists had the swabs’ “DNA barcodes” read (meaning that sequences of the gene for 16S ribosomal RNA were read) to help study the evolutionary relationships between the bacteria. They then compared these sequences to millions of DNA sequences in public databases.

However, the smallest unit by which scientists could match these barcodes was 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequences that differed by 3% or less — which, in mammals, would be like lumping dogs and cats together taxonomically.

For belly button bacteria research, it means that two strains that “match” taxonomically — such as a belly button strain and a species recognized as inhabiting the deep ocean — could actually be separated by several million years of evolution.

New frontier in microbiology

The astonishing number of new microbes discovered in the very beginning stages of this belly button experiment reflects how ignorant we are of microbial diversity.

According to New Scientist:

the inhabitants of our navels seem weird because biologists haven’t sampled sufficiently extensively to document the full diversity of microbial life in a variety of habitats. [Hulcr] likens reactions to the first round of belly button results to the astonishment of the first European explorers seeing African big game — which today seem commonplace. ‘Now you’re expecting rhino and elephants,’ Hulcr says.

While the bacterial cultures will never be quite as exciting as rhino or elephants, it is interesting to see how different the cultures look.

See photos of some swabs below, and browse the belly button bacterial photo galleries on the Belly Button Diversity Project site.

via Popular Science, New Scientist and Discover

Photos: By Stinkie Pinkie via Wikimedia Commons and screenshots of Belly Button Diversity

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Laura Shin

About Laura Shin

Laura Shin is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Laura Shin

Laura Shin

Contributing Editor

Laura Shin has written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, Audubon and SolveClimate.com. She is currently a senior editor at LearnVest.com. Previously, she worked at Newsweek, the New York Times and Wall Street Journal. She holds degrees from Stanford University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.

Follow her on Twitter.

Laura Shin

Laura Shin

In the unlikely event that Laura has a professional or financial relationship with a company she writes about, it will be prominently disclosed.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Familiar Characters
I definitely recognize some of those samples from recent ad hoc probing of "what the heck is in there?"
Posted by Bill_Ross
5th Jul 2011
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Belly buttons
Belly buttons can be sexy, but they can also be prime real estate for bacterial colonies. The bacteria represents important advances in divergent evolution.

Cleaning habits ??? or lack thereof ??? have made amazing discoveries possible. As few people wash their belly buttons with soap, the chance for microbial growth increases. Hulcr suggests there may be links between belly button bacteria and microbes that have previously only been found on the deep ocean floor. This opens entirely new avenues of inquiry within the study of divergent evolution, the ac
Posted by shemyB
6th Jul 2011
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Belly Button lint and other branches of the Tree of Life
We lose a thousand species a day, many mircrobial, the rest being plants, animals and insects, fishes, fowl and whatever, with similar amounts being newly evolved, perhaps at an ever greater rate.
Belly button (bb)diversity only further suggests that the Darwin Tree of Life's trunk is short and stout, with unimaginable cross-fertilization occuring at the ends of broad disparate branches which touch, exchange and combine in ways we are just beginning to discover.
One could surely ask where the bb diversity originates, inside or outside the body, or from both.
As larger sample bases are developed might we find useful drugs, genetic modifications that could prove useful as well?
I always knew there was a reason to save the lint!
Posted by SocratesRedux
8th Jul 2011
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Thank you very much
Well done! Thank you very much for professional templates and community edition
sesli chat sesli sohbet
Posted by yarinsiz
Updated - 25th Aug 2011
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