Dust mites: bane of my existence. Cause of so many people's allergies.
Scientists just completed a census of the creepy crawlies that live in our homes
Do you know the bugs that share your home?
No? Well, pull up a chair and get acquainted. Researchers from North Carolina State University and the University of Colorado Boulder just completed a census of creepy crawlies from hundreds of households across the country and found that creatures from more than 600 genera of arthropods live alongside us in our homes.
Arthropods, a phylum of invertebrate animals with exoskeletons and segmented bodies, include insects, spiders, crustaceans and all manner of other many-legged critters — most of whom you probably wouldn't want to get up close and personal with right before dinner.
But the reality is that you already are on intimate terms with these creatures. They reflect your environment and affect your health, even if you don't notice them.
Distribution of dust mites detected in door trim dust inside homes across the United States (purple) compared with the range where they are predicted to be most abundant (tan).
(Anne A. Madden)
“There are a whole bunch of different arthropods that we may not think about being part of our natural environment in the home but they’re there,” said biologist Anne Madden, the lead author of a report on the census published in the journal Molecular Ecology. “They're our present, but often-ignored roommates.”
Madden and her colleagues solicited samples from more than 700 houses in all 48 contiguous states. Each contributor needed to provide only a tiny amount of dust — one swab from inside the house, another from outside. Each sample could fit on the head of a Q-Tip.
But contained within those swatches of dust was a world of knowledge. After all, dust isn't just dust: It's microscopic detritus of the ecosystem that is your home. It's got bits of bug leg and moth wing scales, flakes of your skin and dander from your pets, bits of feces from inhabitants large and small (hope you weren't still eating breakfast). By sequencing the DNA of the organic material in each sample, Madden could conduct a genetic census of the creatures in that household.
For
this study, she focused on the arthropods. She was specifically
interested in analyzing the diversity of bugs — the variety of standard
and surprising creatures live among us. Some households she examined
had representatives from as many as 45 genera. (Note that diversity is
different from abundance: Just because these houses had a wide
assortment of bugs doesn't mean they were overrun with insects.)
These results allowed the researchers to understand the complex interactions that take place unnoticed at our feet and within our walls. For example, many samples contained DNA from tiny plant-eating aphids, ladybugs that eat them, and parasitic wasps that lay their eggs in aphids.
“We're seeing entire food webs,” Madden said. “ Parasitoids, predators and prey all existing in dust.”
She and her colleagues also began to pick out some trends in the distribution of arthropods and the kinds of homes they like to live in. Roaches tended to stay in warm, southern climates, whereas ladybugs were more plentiful in northern homes. Dust mites like humidity. Houses with pets tended to have more diverse bugs, as did ones with basements.
This data could help clinicians working to understand things such as allergies, according to Madden. It's known that dust mites are a common cause of asthma, as is cockroach waste. “It's good to think about what unexpected arthropods we might be interacting with to figure out how they might be affecting our health in the future,” Madden said.
Some of our bugs may make our homes better without us noticing — spiders that eat other pests, for example. Some might be accidental intruders, tracked in on a sleeve or a dog's paw and as eager to escape the carpeted confines of our homes as we are to have kick them out. Still others may carry out their entire existences right next to us, without us ever noticing
“It’s fun to reveal the mysteries that we didn’t even know were mysteries,” Madden said. “We think of our houses as our most well known and intimate habitats, and yet we still have so much to learn about what's going on inside of them.”
No? Well, pull up a chair and get acquainted. Researchers from North Carolina State University and the University of Colorado Boulder just completed a census of creepy crawlies from hundreds of households across the country and found that creatures from more than 600 genera of arthropods live alongside us in our homes.
Arthropods, a phylum of invertebrate animals with exoskeletons and segmented bodies, include insects, spiders, crustaceans and all manner of other many-legged critters — most of whom you probably wouldn't want to get up close and personal with right before dinner.
But the reality is that you already are on intimate terms with these creatures. They reflect your environment and affect your health, even if you don't notice them.
Distribution of dust mites detected in door trim dust inside homes across the United States (purple) compared with the range where they are predicted to be most abundant (tan).
(Anne A. Madden)
“There are a whole bunch of different arthropods that we may not think about being part of our natural environment in the home but they’re there,” said biologist Anne Madden, the lead author of a report on the census published in the journal Molecular Ecology. “They're our present, but often-ignored roommates.”
Madden and her colleagues solicited samples from more than 700 houses in all 48 contiguous states. Each contributor needed to provide only a tiny amount of dust — one swab from inside the house, another from outside. Each sample could fit on the head of a Q-Tip.
But contained within those swatches of dust was a world of knowledge. After all, dust isn't just dust: It's microscopic detritus of the ecosystem that is your home. It's got bits of bug leg and moth wing scales, flakes of your skin and dander from your pets, bits of feces from inhabitants large and small (hope you weren't still eating breakfast). By sequencing the DNA of the organic material in each sample, Madden could conduct a genetic census of the creatures in that household.
These results allowed the researchers to understand the complex interactions that take place unnoticed at our feet and within our walls. For example, many samples contained DNA from tiny plant-eating aphids, ladybugs that eat them, and parasitic wasps that lay their eggs in aphids.
She and her colleagues also began to pick out some trends in the distribution of arthropods and the kinds of homes they like to live in. Roaches tended to stay in warm, southern climates, whereas ladybugs were more plentiful in northern homes. Dust mites like humidity. Houses with pets tended to have more diverse bugs, as did ones with basements.
This data could help clinicians working to understand things such as allergies, according to Madden. It's known that dust mites are a common cause of asthma, as is cockroach waste. “It's good to think about what unexpected arthropods we might be interacting with to figure out how they might be affecting our health in the future,” Madden said.
Some of our bugs may make our homes better without us noticing — spiders that eat other pests, for example. Some might be accidental intruders, tracked in on a sleeve or a dog's paw and as eager to escape the carpeted confines of our homes as we are to have kick them out. Still others may carry out their entire existences right next to us, without us ever noticing
“It’s fun to reveal the mysteries that we didn’t even know were mysteries,” Madden said. “We think of our houses as our most well known and intimate habitats, and yet we still have so much to learn about what's going on inside of them.”