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#1 | |
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In another thread, Oolon Colluphid wrote:
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Thanks, LFOD [ February 27, 2002: Message edited by: LiveFreeOrDie ]</p> |
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#2 |
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I wondered about that too. Does he mean there are more bacteria in the human gut than there are cells making up the human body?
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#3 |
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He could as welll have said that 99% of our alleles are shared with other living things; ie genetically only 1% of our genes are exclusively human. I haven't heard that other statistic before though. That's a lot of bacteria... yech.
[ February 27, 2002: Message edited by: Kevin Dorner ]</p> |
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#4 | |
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Link program last night (or maybe it was another show). NOt sure if those were the numbers though. As for Oolon being 1% human, we Scotts have suspected as much about the Brits for eons.. ![]() |
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#5 | |
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![]() Quote:
And I should know, I am English. My wife is Scots. Her ancestors earned their living by stealing cattle. English cattle of course. |
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#6 |
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It's simple: the bacterial cells in and on your body outnumber the human cells a hundred to one, but that's not saying much.
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#7 | |
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theyeti |
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#8 | |
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Here you go: <a href="http://www.bact.wisc.edu/Bact303/Bact303normalflora" target="_blank">The Bacterial Flora of Humans</a>.
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[ February 27, 2002: Message edited by: tronvillain ]</p> |
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#9 |
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There are something like 100 trillion (10^14) "properly" human cells in our bodies (as adults, of course); so the number of intestinal bacteria is similar.
This estimate assumes an average cell size of 10 microns, which is reasonable; the average size of a bacterium is 1 - 2 microns, which implies a volume (and mass) 100 to 1000 times less. |
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#10 | ||||
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Well, I thought this bit of my memory had tripped me up, so I did a quick trawl round the net.
From <a href="http://www.geocities.com/snowyssillyfacts/humans2.html" target="_blank">here</a>: Quote:
From <a href="http://www.cehs.siu.edu/fix/medmicro/normal.htm" target="_blank">Normal Flora</a>: Quote:
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So it seems the 100:1 I'd remembered may have been an overestimate (though it doesn't look impossible. There's the same number of bacterial cells in our intestines as there is making up our whole bodies (50/50); another 40% of all the cells are bacteria on the skin, mouth, urinogenital and respiratory tracts. We are apparently only 10% human. I'll amend my original post accordingly, though it hardly damages my point! As to being only 1% human... being from a small planet somewhere in the vicinity of Betelgeuse, and not from Guildford after all (having hitched a lift here following Ford's bloody Guide entry -- it looked like a quiet place to write ![]() ( ![]() Oolon |
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