Fisherman's Guide To The Microbiome
Congratulations!!! The fact that you are reading this webpage means you have made enough of a connection between your health and your microbiome to be here. Making that connection is a great place to start and hopefully the information in this wiki will help you further understand that relationship.
I am not a fisherman but I do have a useful understanding of how my microbiome works that I equate with fishing. Fishing techniques range from science based as commercial fishing operations are likely to utilize to the fuzzy logic traditional, low-tech artisanal fisherman use based on observations in the field.
This Fisherman's Guide To The Microbiome is at the low-tech end of the scale. It is something anyone can read and understand using just plain common sense.
The Ecosystem
Science can be useful but doesn't need to be burdensome. First a brief and factual description of the ecosystem our microbiome is...
According to Harvard Health Online:
- About 100 trillion bacteria, both good and bad, live inside your digestive system. Collectively, they're known as the gut microbiota.
In the Encyclopedia of Cell Biology:
- The gut microbiome is the collection of microorganisms including bacteria, archaea, viruses, and fungi found within the gut and their overall genetic information. Our gut microbiota has been shown to have broad effects on our health and well-being, impacting our immune system and metabolism, detoxifying various ingested components, and even affecting behavior.
Well put! The Fisherman says that sounds right.
This phrase is very important in the context of the type of Failure Of TGA that I describe in detail in this wiki:
- detoxifying various ingested components
The Fisherman says that "various ingested components" means chemical compounds in our food. And "detoxifying" means taking care of the chemical compounds in our food that we are not designed to handle. So in this sense our microbiome acts like the garbage collector. In fact it's a symbiotic relationship: we have something we don't need and don't know what to do with but our microbiome has a use for it and disposes of it.
In terms of the numbers of bacterial species, kind of like teams or families, I have read estimates ranging from 400 to a few thousand. My guess based on what I see on the Internet it is a few 1000 but science so far only understands some of them and are therefore recognizing a few hundred as consequential.
Mixed in with our bacterial microbiome is our virome, a collection of viruses that also inhabit our gut. It is estimated there are 140,000 different viruses living there. Unfortunately even less is known about our virome than our microbiome.
For our purposes it is adequate to understand that at our level of operation we are talking about species and strains of bacteria, strains are a subset of species. For an in depth explanation of bacterial taxonomy please check out:
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial_taxonomy
For further research:
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_microbiome
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virome
Enough numbers and science, suffice to say there are a lot of microbes in us and they have a consequential impact on our health.
Visualize
First let's consider a line drawing of me and my gut. It's just an empty pipe.
Now let's imagine the ecosystem that inhabits this pipe that runs through. Not a literal image but an imaginary one. Personally I think of my microbiome as a river. The idea of a meandering river lends itself to the imagination of my microbiome but other schemes could work too. Like a factory or even Pokemon.