Something You Should Know - Why Parking Your Car Is Such a Pain & How Invisible Microbes Shape Your World
Episode Date: May 8, 2023Drinking coffee in the morning is a pleasant habit for many of us. However, this episode begins by explaining why you might want to smell your coffee as well as drink it to help you think better and b...e more productive. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6881620/ In many metropolitan areas, parking is the number one land use. The U.S. has 4 parking spaces for every car on the road! So why is it so hard to find a spot when you need one? That is what Henry Grabar is here to explain and discuss. Henry is a staff writer at Slate, and author of the book Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World (https://amzn.to/3HG2xLg). Listen and you will understand why parking is a much bigger deal than you ever realized. Microbes are those little tiny organisms that you can’t see without a microscope -things like germs, bacteria, fungi. We have a tendency to think of them as dangerous or things that cause illness and disease. Yet, actually most of them don’t cause any harm and some are even good for you. And by the way, you have trillions of microbes on you and inside of you. Here to take us on a tour into the invisible world of microbes is Jake Robinson Jake is a microbial ecologist and author of the book Invisible Friends: How Microbes Shape our Lives and the World Around Us (https://amzn.to/44pGRwR) While some people do have food allergies, there aren’t as many as you might think. A lot of people who claim to be allergic to certain foods actually have an intolerance to the food. But that is not an actual allergy. Listen as I explain the difference. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/food-allergy/expert-answers/food-allergy/faq-20058538 PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS! Discover Credit Cards do something pretty awesome. At the end of your first year, they automatically double all the cash back you’ve earned! See terms and check it out for yourself at https://Discover.com/match If you own a small business, you know the value of time. Innovation Refunds does too! They've made it easy to apply for the employee retention credit or ERC by going to https://getrefunds.com to see if your business qualifies in less than 8 minutes! Innovation Refunds has helped small businesses collect over $3 billion in payroll tax refunds! Let’s find “us” again by putting our phones down for five. Five days, five hours, even five minutes. Join U.S. Cellular in the Phones Down For Five challenge! Find out more at https://USCellular.com/findus Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know,
if you drink coffee in the morning, you might want to take a whiff of it too.
Then, parking your car.
Parking has changed the way we live and taken up a lot of our space.
You know, we could pave a small state with the amount of land we have dedicated for parking. parking has changed the way we live and taken up a lot of our space.
You know, we could pave a small state with the amount of land we have dedicated for parking.
There are between four and nine parking spaces per vehicle in this country.
There is more space for parking each car than there is for housing each person.
Also, the important difference between a food allergy and a food intolerance.
And microbes, those little invisible organisms like germs and bacteria, they get a bad rap.
We've had this quite negative, demonizing view of microbes, that microscopic organisms
cause diseases.
And a few microbes do cause disease, but many of them, over 99%, are actually harmless to
us or really beneficial and vital for our survival.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Something you should know.
Fascinating intel. The world's top experts.
And practical advice you can use in your life. Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
Hi, welcome to Something You Should Know. I've been a big coffee drinker most of my life. I'm
one of those people that really needs to have a cup of coffee in the morning. Maybe you are too time to smell your coffee before you drink it,
there's some science that says it can have a powerful effect on your brain.
Specifically, inhaling the fragrance of coffee can enhance working memory
and stimulate alertness.
So drinking coffee may help you stay alert and be more productive,
but drinking and smelling coffee can be even better.
And that is something you should know.
If you drive a car, there is one big part of that whole experience that you don't think about a lot, except when you have to.
And that is parking. Because no matter how convenient it is to have a car,
you have to have a place to put it everywhere you go.
Parking can be a hassle.
It can be expensive and in some places virtually impossible to find.
Then, of course, there is paid parking and parking meters,
which can result in expensive parking tickets if you don't feed the meter.
See, parking really is a big deal.
In fact, did you know that in many U.S. cities, parking is the number one land use?
And it has literally shaped the landscape in many parts of the world.
Here to explain how and why you should care is Henry Grabar.
Henry is a staff writer at Slate and author of the book
Paved Paradise, How Parking Explains the World. Hey, Henry, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Pleasure to be here.
So when I think about the subject of parking, it doesn't feel like that's much of a subject,
except that, you know, parking is something you complain about. There's never enough of it. You
can't find a spot when you need it. So why dive into this topic? Why is this so interesting?
I think people rarely think about it and sometimes say to me, well, that sounds like sort of a boring
thing to write a book about. But then once you get them on the subject and they start talking
about parking, you realize that everybody is full of opinions about parking.
And actually, everybody spends a lot of time thinking about it. The realization that I had
was that I realized I was surrounded by parking. I mean, once you start to see it as the number one
land use in many American cities, you can't stop seeing it. And it pops out everywhere. And once
you begin to understand its cost and its effect on landscape
and the architecture and our travel patterns and our housing costs, you never look at it the same
way again. So when you say that parking is the number one land use in many cities, explain what
you mean, because that's that's hard to imagine. There is more space for parking each car in this
country than there is for housing each person.
I think you can sometimes see this when you – if you look at a satellite image of downtown Kansas City or Columbus, Ohio or Little Rock, the parking lots really stand out.
It is the dominant feature of the landscape. And in fact, we actually require this by law that many buildings consist
more than half of the property has to be devoted to parking, which is to say for your square
footage, let's say you run a restaurant for every hundred square feet of restaurant, you have to
provide one parking space. Well, a parking space is bigger than 100 square feet. So you're essentially legislating that every restaurant have more space for parking
than space for restaurant. And those kind of rules apply where? Because obviously you couldn't
make that the rule in New York or Chicago because there's no room for, you couldn't open a
restaurant because there's no room for those parking spots.
Well, those are the rules almost everywhere.
Now, places like New York and Chicago have decided that they are sufficiently dense that it doesn't make sense to require somebody opening a new restaurant to provide two dozen parking spaces.
But that remains the law in most American cities and suburbs. And so when you think
about the American architectural vernacular, you know, you're driving down a, you know,
six lane road, you've got these sort of stores and restaurants and retail set behind parking
lots on each side of the road. That style of architecture is really the architecture of
parking requirements. Because if you're required to build that much parking,
that's just what the architecture ends up looking like.
It's like the built American form follows from the requirement of providing parking.
And that's how we get what the country looks like today.
Yeah.
With a lot,
a lot of strip malls where the front of it is,
it's like an L shape and the front of it is all parking.
Exactly.
And it's really ugly. we used to, that there's this kind of sense that like, both for residential and commercial
architecture, that there was this golden era in American history where we built things we liked,
and we stopped doing that. And I would suggest to you that one of the main reasons we stopped
doing that was that we imposed the obligation to provide parking. And providing parking just
creates unattractive buildings. It creates buildings that are separated from the street by a huge parking lot.
It makes it basically impossible to renovate any historic structures because you have to provide a certain number of parking spaces.
So you basically have to demolish the building next door.
And if you've looked at like a new office building or condo tower in an American downtown, look at the bottom like six to eight
floors. I almost guarantee you they are used for parking. And in fact, there are some buildings
that like by the number of floors are more than half parking. So what you're really building
is a parking garage with a little bit of apartment or a little bit of office on top.
So I find it surprising that parking is the number one land
use in many communities. What else about parking would I find surprising? Well, I think one of the
ones that always grabs me right away is that there are between four and nine parking spaces per
vehicle in this country. So that means that the national parking stock is only 25 percent full at its fullest moment.
And of course, some of those cars are in motion.
So when you think about how full parking is, how hard it is to find a parking spot, there is just an unbelievable quantity of parking in this country. And so I think that that's one of the things that grabs people right away is,
you know, we could pave a small state with the amount of land we have dedicated for parking,
which suggests that perhaps building more parking is not the solution to making it easier to find
a parking spot. Wait a minute. How can that be? Because that is not people's experience frequently that there's all this abundant parking. It's often very difficult to find a parking spot, it's so hard to find one. I think there's three reasons that this happens.
The first one is that parking is not shared, right? So we talked about how every apartment
building, every office, every courthouse, every movie theater has to provide their own parking
spaces. Well, in most cities by law, the office and the condo can't double up and share a garage. And they definitely can't share
that garage with the people who are going to the sub shop next door. And what that means is that
when you arrive in a place that appears to have a lot of parking, you quickly realize that each
lot is actually proprietary and belongs to a certain business, a certain department, et cetera.
So it looks like a lot of parking, but when you need one, it's not necessarily available.
The second big part of that is that the parking is free. And because the best street parking in
most places is free, it becomes really hard to get a spot there. And if you just charge even a
little bit for that really good parking, people who would otherwise get there early in the morning
and park all day will park a little further away. And then when you show up at lunch or to run an
errand or to do a delivery, there'll be a parking space available to you. I mean, you might have to
pay a couple quarters for it, but that's better than driving around the block a hundred times.
Is there any sense or any statistic about how much the typical car owner pays to park their car?
Most people park for free most of the time. I would say upwards of 90% of the time people park
for free. And when you, and in fact, parking, free parking is basically the number one determinant of car ownership and car use.
So it's one of the great ironies about parking is that one of the reasons we built so much parking and we required people to build so much parking was that we were very concerned about traffic.
Like traffic was a total nightmare in American cities in the 1940s and 50s.
And the reason for this, people thought,
was that there wasn't enough parking. So they built all this free parking. And one of the
great ironies is that all that free parking encouraged many, many more people to buy cars
and drive them everywhere. And as the urban environment degraded with more and more parking
lots taking the place of buildings, it became more and more challenging to say, walk or ride a bike or take transit to a new destination. And so in this way,
parking is like this, it's like a narcotic, right? Like the more you have of it, the more you need.
Well, you know, when I saw your book, and I started thinking about this,
what I find interesting is, I don't take Ubers or Lyft very often, but I would say at least half of the
time that I do, it's not because I don't want to drive. It's because I don't want to park.
I believe it. I think that, you know, one of the other statistics that grabbed me when I first
heard it is that studies estimate that a third of downtown traffic is people looking for a place to park.
And so that's you, right?
That's you driving around in circles looking for a place to park.
I agree.
It's maddening.
And it encourages people to stop driving.
And that just goes to show that if you want to control traffic, if you want to control emissions cut down on
car crashes, on pollutants that drift into the windows of people's apartments,
parking is the lever. And I think that's what you're experiencing there,
is that the challenge of parking motivates you to find another way to get around.
I'm speaking with Henry Grabar, and the name of his book is
Paved Paradise, How Parking Explains the World.
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Intelligence Squared wherever you get your podcasts. So, Henry, does it work when communities, city governments institute paid parking to replace free parking to discourage people from parking?
Does that work?
In most cases, it does.
And here's why.
Paid parking works best, these city planners say, when it's not designed to raise money.
The point of paid parking should be to organize the way people park and how long they park for.
So you push the people who are parking all day into the spots a little further away, and the people who are parking for a shorter amount of time can park closer.
Unfortunately, in the last 70 years, many governments have thought of parking meters
simply as a way to raise money for motorists. And I think that is not the purpose of parking
meters. The purpose of parking meters is to organize parking demand. It's the only way we
have because otherwise it's just a total free for all. Well, I know there are a lot of communities
that, for example, at Christmas, they'll put little hoods over the parking meters and let you park for free.
So obviously that's to encourage more business, which would what I infer from that is by having parking meters, you discourage business.
Yeah, I unfortunately I think a lot of those communities have it backwards.
The problem with hooding the parking meters is
that let's say I want to run an errand downtown. I'll drive there and I will leave my car there
all day, right? And I'll go around and do whatever. In fact, you know who's going to
leave their car there all day is the people who work in the stores. They're the people who get
their first thing in the morning. They may usually pay for parking in a garage or park further away,
but when the meters are hooded, they're going to park right in front of the shop.
When you show up at 2 p.m. to do your Christmas shopping, you will find that there is no place
to park. You'll get mad, and you might even drive to the suburbs and shop at the mall.
I think free parking downtown is pretty much a losing proposition for business owners if there's
not enough parking. Sure, if you're in some tiny country town where there's only 100 people live there, yeah, you don't need to make
anybody pay for parking. But in a congested city district, it's the only way to make sure that
there are spaces available. And I think most people, they don't like paying for parking,
but when push comes to shove, they prefer paying for parking to looking for a space for 20 minutes and then giving up and driving away.
Is parking a good business to be in?
I would say it's a simple business to be in.
I mean, for decades, parking was the largest all-cash business in the United States.
What? Yeah, yeah, because, you know, everybody, you know, the whole the whole parking industry was just collecting cash in boxes nationwide at sports stadiums, downtowns, airports everywhere.
And this created obviously this made it a very lucrative business to be in, especially if you weren't properly reporting your income to the IRS.
So you said that if we build more parking, then more cars show up to take it.
And so that doesn't work.
And then if you charge a lot for parking, people really hate that.
So what's the solution where everybody's happy?
Well, I think one solution is the one that we did in the United States, which is you build so much parking that there's not really anything left to drive to.
And that's kind of what happened in a lot of American downtowns. They were obsessed with
this idea that to compete with the suburbs, they needed to provide as much free and ample parking
as possible. And it turns out that if your number one priority is free parking, downtown is never going to beat a mall in the suburbs.
It's just never going to compete.
And so, you know, one solution we ended up with is you build so much parking that it's not hard to find a spot.
But also there's not much there's not that much to do because your town is mostly parking.
The other option, which I think is coming into fashion now, is to try and find ways
to manage demand for parking.
So that could take the form of parking meters, trying to discourage people from maybe parking
all day on Main Street or encouraging them to carpool
instead of the whole family,
everyone driving down in their own car.
And the other element I think is to help people
try not to drive so much if they want to, right?
Like obviously many people depend on their cars
and need their cars to go about their business in America.
It's a vast and
sprawling country. I recognize that. But lots of people actually live within a pretty close distance
of the errands they do every day, whether it's taking the kids to school or going to work or
going to the coffee shop or going to the grocery store. The average trip in this country is under
three miles. So that's a distance that could be done on a foot or electric bicycle or on a golf cart or
something like that, or on a bus. And unfortunately, those modes of travel have become really
challenging. And one of the reasons I think that it's so hard to not drive everywhere is, in fact,
precisely because of parking. I mean, you see this trade-off in major cities where cities will not build protected bike lanes
for people to get safely from destination to destination on a bicycle
because they are afraid of taking away a lane of parking that's used for parked cars.
But if you take away parking for buses or whatever, bike lanes,
you add to the traffic because now people are having to
keep driving to find a place somewhere else to park their car, which clogs the roads,
which upsets drivers, which upsets bicyclists. So you're really creating more trouble.
That was the thinking for most of the 20th century in most U.S. cities. And I get it.
It's really intuitive, this idea
that if you take away parking and most traffic is people looking for parking, then you are going to
create more traffic, make people mad. They're going to leave and go to the suburbs. But I think
what the parking reformers are arguing for is not so much, let's get rid of all the parking,
but let's manage it. Let's price the busiest parking. Let's get rid of all the parking, but let's manage it. You know, let's price the busiest parking.
Let's get rid of some parking spots where it makes it possible to create a way for people to get around another way in a bus, on a bike, et cetera.
And, you know, let's let's, for example, direct people away from the main street right in front of the shops and into the public garage a few blocks away
if they're parking for more than three or four hours. Like those are the kinds of policies that
can both, I think, reduce demand for parking, but also ultimately for people who are looking for
parking, make it easier for them to park. There are people, again, I kind of put myself in this category, who just hate to pay for parking. It's kind of like ATM fees or high gas prices. It isn't that it's necessarily a lot of money. It's the principle of the thing. be able to park on it and not charge me for it and give me a ticket when my meter runs out and
now I've got to pay 50 bucks. There's something about it that just really rubs me and I think a
lot of people the wrong way. Why do you feel that way about parking and not about, say, any other
good or service you consume? I didn't say I have it. I have the same thing
about ATM fees and high gas prices. So it isn't just parking. It's there's something about it,
though, that, you know, that public street is just as much mine as anybody else's. And
but I even don't like valet parking. I mean, I don't I just think it's such a rip off
because I can park my own car. Just give me a spot. I'll be fine, I don't, I just think it's such a rip off because I can park my own car.
Just give me a spot. I'll be fine. I don't need you. Yeah, I get it. I, you know, I don't like
paying for parking either. Nobody, to be sure, nobody likes paying for parking. I think the
question is not, do we want to pay for parking? The question is, do we want to accept the trade-offs
that come with free parking everywhere all the time? And in the case of basically the last century
of American planning, we've learned that free parking for everyone all the time is a recipe for
traffic congestion, high housing costs, ugly architecture, dangerous streets, and ultimately a place that's
less accessible, not more accessible. Well, it would seem that there's going to have to be,
for any of this to work, some sort of collective mind shift about this whole thing. Because I think
people who drive cars believe that if they drive a car somewhere, they're entitled to a place to put it.
Even if they have to pay for it, there should be a place to put it. Otherwise, they're not going
to drive there. And it's an entitlement almost. And to change that mindset seems like it's going
to be hard. I think one thing to drive home about parking
is that it feels like it costs nothing because it's free for you most of the time. But building
parking is actually really, really expensive. Like just building a parking lot can cost five,
$10,000 a space and building a parking garage can cost $50,000 of space. And if it's underground,
it can be up to $100,000 of space. And so when we ask for more parking, we are folding in hidden
and massive costs that aren't paid for by drivers when they show up at the parking garage, but
they're paid for by everybody else. If you rent an apartment in a building with
a 50-space parking garage, the cost of building that garage is folded into your rent, whether you
drive or not. And I don't think that's fair. Well, after listening to you, I don't think I'm
going to look at parking quite the same way again. I've been talking to Henry Gravar. He is a staff writer at Slate, and the name of his book is Paved Paradise, How Parking Explains the World.
And there's a link to that book in the show notes.
Appreciate it.
Thanks, Henry.
All right.
Thanks a lot.
Take care.
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but what are they exactly? What do they do? Where do they come from? And how do they affect you?
Well, it's actually a fascinating topic, and here to explain it is
Jake Robinson. Jake is a microbial ecologist and author of the book Invisible Friends,
How Microbes Shape Our Lives and the World Around Us. Hi, Jake. Welcome to Something You Should Know.
Hi, Mike. Thank you very much.
So what are microbes? What does that word microbe mean?
So a microbe is any organism that you essentially need a microscope to see.
So any living thing that's invisible to the naked eye.
So these include things like bacteria, fungi, also known as fungi,
fungi, depending on where you are in the world.
Algae, these tiny organisms called archaea. And so these prefer extreme environments, things like hot springs, but they also occur in the human body too.
There's protozoa as well, so these are tiny animal-like creatures. And some consider viruses
to be microbes too, but there's a debate about whether they're alive or not, and most people
would say that they're not alive. And so microbes are everywhere. They're inside us, they're on us, they're in the environment
around us, in the soils, on plant leaves, in the air. So yeah, they're essentially any organism
that you wouldn't be able to see with the naked eye. So things like germs, those are microbes
because you can't see them. Anything you can't see is a microbe. Yeah, anything that's living is a microscopic organism or a microbe for short.
And you study them.
Why?
What is it about them that fascinates you?
And why is it important to shine a light on this?
So over the kind of last 150 years or so,
we've had this quite negative demonizing view of microbes because germ theory
suggested that microscopic organisms cause diseases and a few microbes do cause disease
but many of them over 99% are actually harmless to us or really beneficial and vital for our survival
and so I'm trying to change the narrative along with many other people that
you know we need to look at microbes in a more positive way and try and understand their functional
roles in keeping us alive and all of it all of a life alive on the planet isn't that interesting
that that the the general sense is that microbes little germy things are bad for you when you say that you know 99 of them are not so
i wonder how they got that reputation sure i mean we didn't know much about them until the
the 19th century germ theory kind of you know it's this leading theory that suggested that we
really need an explanation for why so many people had diseases and why so many people were dying
and so it's just sort of it created created a storm from there, I guess,
that, you know, all microbes are bad.
And we didn't have the technology to understand that microbes
can actually do good things as well.
And they're really complex communities of life.
And so the last sort of 10, well, between 10 and 30 years,
we've developed much more advanced technology in order to understand
them at the community level so i have all these microbes probably millions billions of microbes
in my body yes yep how'd they get there trillions so they get there from largely from the environment
around us so when we're born we pick them up from born, we pick them up from our mothers, we pick
them up from our food, we pick them up from spending time in the natural environments around
us. And so we emit actually, it's this kind of constant flux between our bodies and the
environment around us. So we emit a million biological particles every single hour. So
every one of us is kind of surrounded by this microbial cloud that's emitting from our body.
But we're also ingesting and we're also inhaling millions of microscopic organisms every single day.
And so again, it's this kind of two-way exchange between our bodies and our environments.
And these microbes, trillions you say, that I have in my body, do they all play a role?
Or is this just very benign they're passing through or why are they
there? Yeah, so many of them will be benign. So many of them will just be fleeting. But some of
them will play really important roles in keeping you alive. So some microbes are really important
for digestion in the body. So what you eat, it needs to be broken down in order so that you can
use the micronutrients.
Some microbes are important in cell signaling.
And so they produce chemicals that allow our cells to communicate.
So every cell in our body is needed, requires these chemicals in order to communicate with each other.
And they're thought to be important in brain health, lots of different things in our bodies.
So they play important
functional roles in keeping us alive. And do we all have basically the same microbes in our body?
I mean, what are the chances that the microbes in my body are more or less the same as the ones in
your body, or are they really different? Yeah, so it'll be likely very different,
so you'll likely have different species in there,
depending on how you treat your body, what kind of food you eat, whether you exercise regularly,
whether you spend time in certain environments, how much pollution you're exposed to,
these kind of things, these all affect your walking ecosystem. So your body is essentially
a walking ecosystem. And yeah, so your microbiome will be quite different to somebody else's, but it might
be more similar to someone you live with because you're kind of exchanging microbes with the
people that you interact with every day.
So yeah, it would likely be quite different to mine because I'm at the other side of the
world, not interacting with you.
And if you were to, you know, crack each of us open and take a look, like, is one better than the other or they're just different?
Defining a healthy microbiome is an ongoing debate at the minute.
So it's kind of difficult to define and sort of extrapolate to everybody across the world.
So each of us have different requirements and one microbiome might look different to the other but it might not necessarily
be healthier than the other so there's an ongoing debate at the minute it's likely that our
microbiomes will be very different but everybody has kind of different requirements and different
species but there's also a concept called functional redundancy so even though you might
have different species in your body to mine, they may have the same functional roles, you know, in providing chemicals and all sorts of different compounds our bodies
need. So we hear things like, you know, oh, you should take probiotics and then because that's
good for your microbiome. And what is, is that all nonsense or is there some science there or what?
Yeah. So there is some science. It's some of it's conflicting. So we need more evidence,
need more randomized control trials. But there is some evidence that suggests that taking probiotics
can improve the balance, the ratio of, you know, healthy or good microbes to these opportunistic
pathogens for sure. And it makes sense as well. And, you know, prebiotics are really important
as well. So these are the foods that your microbes feed on. And so having diverse prebiotics in the form of diverse vegetables and fruits, etc.,
provides the nutrients that a healthy gut ecosystem requires.
And so that's good for you as well.
Well, what about the supplements, the probiotic supplements?
Because they can be quite expensive.
Are they worth it?
I think there this decent evidence
but not it's not compelling necessarily and it's mostly i'd advise to take a more holistic approach
so you know having a more diverse diet with lots of different colored fruits and vegetables
spending time in biodiverse environments these kind of holistic approaches and it's likely that
supplements will have a small effect but but again, I'd advise to
take more of a kind of lifestyle holistic approach to your health. How do these microbes in our
bodies affect things like our thinking, our mood, our cognitive function, that kind of thing?
Yeah, so it's a really exciting field of research at the minute on the microbiota gut-brain axis. And it's thought that microbes in the gut can communicate with the
brain by various different pathways, for instance, releasing certain chemicals and compounds that
tinker with the cells and the fibers of our nerve cells that link the gut to the brain,
and vice versa as well. It's thought that the brain can communicate with the gut and its microbes via what's called a vagus nerve so this is the largest
cranial nerve in the human body um but there are other pathways as well but it's early days early
research but it's really exciting it's thought that these microbes can produce these chemicals
that do have an effect on our brains so for instance they could affect our moods
so experiments have shown that animals non-human animals that is have shown that gut microbes can influence feeding decisions sexual preferences mood how attracted or averse an animal is to a
particular smell and even the types of environments that animals choose to spend time in which is
quite incredible really. One recent study showed that gut microbes in mice had a direct significant
influence on their desire to exercise by regulating chemical signaling in the brain
and particularly related to dopamine. So yes in microbes we need more studies in humans but
microbes could potentially influence all sorts of behaviors.
So when we talk about microbes in the human body, it seems like the conversation is always about the gut.
But aren't there microbes everywhere?
Yeah, so we have distinct microbial communities, for instance, on our skin, in our airways,
you know, under our armpits, the microbial community is going to be different to the
microbial communities in our guts. And they all play really important roles or important
functional roles in our health. So microbes on our skin play an important role in our immune
system, protecting it from those few pathogens that do cause disease so if we have
a diverse microbiome then it's more likely to you know they're more likely to say you know there's
no room at the end and boot out these opportunistic pathogens that try and invade our bodies
and the same goes for the gut microbiome as well with the gut microbiome is the most
the sort of the the densest habitat on our body so it has the most number of species and it plays various other roles you know like breaking our food down so
it's important and digestion as well but yes like you said there are microbe
communities in different parts of our bodies in our mouths and our skin etc
that also have really important roles and keeping us alive so you said we have
what trillions of these micro microbes in us and on us, yes?
Yes, so around 100 trillion bacteria I believe, and I think there's many more viruses as well.
And how long do they typically last? And if and when they die, where do they go?
Yes, so microbes have a really short lifespan, but they also are able to kind of
reproduce rapidly as well. So they may die, you know, within hours or days, but they also
rapidly reproduce, they replace themselves as well. And the same kind of predator-prey dynamics
that you see in ecosystems, you know, for example, when a lion hunts down an antelope,
these same principles of ecology
apply at the microscopic scale as well and so we have these turnovers of microbial communities
as a result of predator prey dynamics so viruses will hunt down bacteria much like again the lion
would hunt down an antelope so these these viruses called bacteria phages specialize in um hunting down bacteria and in
fact this is quite an interesting statistic so every 48 hours half of all the bacteria on the
entire planet are killed by phages so that's quite mind-blowing to think about and what i'm sorry
what is that word again phages yeah so some people call them phages, but in the UK we call them phages.
And they're called bacteria phages.
They're like these tiny little spider-like spaceships from Mars.
If you Google them, you'll see what I mean.
They have these landing gear and they land on the bacteria and then inject their DNA into the bacteria and it ends up killing them.
So I've heard, for example, that you're supposed to let your kids play in the dirt,
that the microbes in soil and that the microbes in the environment, that we don't want to be too
clean, that we want to interact with these microbes. Can you talk about that?
So Professor Gray-Mook, he's an immunologist from London, he put forward what's called the
Old Friends Hypothesis. And this suggests that we've co-evolved with these microorganisms these specific microbes
over hundreds of thousands of years and they've played a key role in shaping our and regulating
our immune system and that's why they're called old friends um and it's important that we expose
these old friends in order to for them to regulate what's called our innate immune
system. And our innate immune system is also known as non-specific immunity. And so it will attack
anything that tries to invade the body in the absence of proper regulation. So it'll attack
ordinarily innocuous substances like dust and pollen. And in extreme cases, it will attack
our own cells as well. And that's what manifests as an autoimmune disease. And so we need to be exposed to these different microbes
from the environment in order for them to play this regulatory role in our innate immune system.
But it's also really important to be exposed to as many different microbes as possible as well
in order to train what's called our adaptive immune system and so Graham likens
the human immune system at birth to a computer and so we at birth we have our we have the hardware
which is analogous to the cellular structures of our immune system but we also have the software
which is analogous to the the genes that encode for proteins and functions that allowed our immune
system to function.
But the thing that's missing at birth is data. And much like a computer model or computer system requires data in order to be trained, in order to be functional, so does our immune system.
And so by being exposed to as many different species of microbes from a young age as possible,
we're able to build up this large repertoire of what's called tiny immune cells and
these are memory cells, remember all these different shapes and sizes of microbes and allow
us to mount a much more efficient immune response to pathogens in the future. So these are two of
the reasons why we need to be exposed to the microorganisms in the natural environment from
a young age as well because as i mentioned earlier
it's the the period between sort of zero and two or three years old which is when our gut
microbiomes are most plastic or most um able to be colonized from the microbes in the environment
so it's important that um our kids spend time in natural environments, you know, playing in dirt, climbing trees, etc. So I assume if we all humans have these microbes all over us and in us, every other living thing
must too that we see. Yeah, exactly. So I like, there's a phrase I like to use, it's
all the nature you can see intimately depends on all the nature you can't see.
And by this, I mean that, you know, the animals, the plants, everything that we can see intimately depends on all the nature you can't see and by this I mean that you know the
animals the plants everything that we can see intimately depends on these symbiotic relationships
with the invisible world and so microbes are really important they live live in and on plants
so they live in the soil on plant roots inside plant roots everything you can think of microbes
live in on and as I said just like the human, so this has been quite a human-centric talk,
but just like the human body, how microbes play these core functional roles in keeping
us alive, they also play these important functional roles in keeping all other animals and plants
alive too.
You know, as I was looking through your book, I landed on something that I'm not sure exactly how this fits into this discussion,
but I'd never even heard of this, about nutrient density and how it's diminishing over the last several decades.
Can you explain what that is and some examples and then how it fits into this discussion?
We've degraded over the last century, we've degraded the soil so much through um you
know adverse farming practices etc and these monoculture fields are not not applying principles
of ecology to our agriculture and so we've um and so in order to have soil health in order to have
soil healthy soils we need to think about the biology of the soil it's a really important factor so the microbes
in the soil play really important roles again in decomposition in providing nutrients for plants
etc and because we've had this soil degradation over time we're actually losing the the micronutrients
in the soil and then the micronutrients that would ordinarily transfer to the plants and the fruits
and vegetables that we eat are becoming less dense because of this degradation and so in relation how
it relates to this this conversation is that we need to understand the microbial ecology of the
soil and protect it in order to protect the the the nutrients of our foods basically
i'd never heard of that and according to you it says you would
have to eat four carrots today to get the same amount of magnesium from one carrot in 1940
yeah it's mind-blowing how come i never heard of this i know it's i don't know i've never heard
it until i researched it for the book to be honest but there's some figure about apples as well with iron content i think that's quite 26 apples to get the same amount of iron from a
single apple in 1940 that's amazing it is amazing it depends on where the apple's grown and where
these vegetables are grown so you know organic or regenerative agricultural principles will
that figure probably doesn't apply to those situations.
It's these kind of mass monoculture agricultural situations where the nutrients will be
less dense, essentially. So when people take an antibiotic to help kill whatever bad thing is
causing them to be sick, an antibiotic will kill lots of things, I
assume lots of microbes within the body. So can you talk about that?
So we have these broad spectrum or more specific antibiotics and particularly
the broad spectrum ones these will destroy lots of different microbes that
are living in your body and many of these may play those important roles in
keeping you healthy. So if we take
antibiotics regularly, then we're essentially napalming that rainforest regularly with we're
destroying the gut ecosystem. So it's going to have a really detrimental effect on your health
and your immune system. You can bounce back again by take by applying more holistic principles to
your life, you know, principles to your life you know
make sure you have a diverse diet lots of fruits and vegetables exercise plenty
you know spend time in biodiverse environments these kind of things but the longer
the longer you live the longer it takes to bounce back from these these events and so as you're when
you're much younger you're more likely to,
your gut ecosystem is more likely to recover
much quicker than when you're older.
What would exercise have to do with it?
So exercise has been shown to be really important
in providing certain chemicals that gut microbes need
in order to select those more beneficial microbes
as opposed to pathogens.
It's also good for bowel movement.
So it moves toxins and away
from building up in certain areas and also if we think about the microbiota gut brain axis so this
two-way communication system linking our brains to our guts exercise is really important for our
brains and our moods etc so it's likely to have an important role in our gut ecosystem as well via our brain and vice versa.
So there's various ways in which exercise is good for our microbes.
Well, it is amazing to think of all this little tiny microbial life going on around us and in us.
And we're so unaware of it.
And yet there's so much going on.
I've been talking to Jake Robinson. He is a
microbial ecologist, and the name of his book is Invisible Friends, How Microbes Shape Our Lives
and the World Around Us. And there is a link to that book in the show notes. Appreciate it, Jake.
Thanks for taking the time. Cheers, Mike. Thanks for having me on.
A lot of people who think they have a food allergy actually have a food intolerance.
If you suddenly, for example, develop a reaction to a certain food or beverage,
you're probably intolerant, not allergic.
Allergies generally start in childhood, and they might even disappear over time.
Allergies involve the immune system and are generally more serious.
Food intolerances tend to increase with age and are more of a digestive matter,
and usually just a nuisance.
The most common food intolerances are lactose, gluten, and MSG.
A lot of people develop intolerances for sulfites, too.
That's the compound found in beer, wine, and champagne,
and is sometimes added to dried fruit or canned foods as a preservative.
If any of those things make you itchy, congested, or swollen,
you're intolerant, but not allergic.
And that is something you should know.
This would be a good time, in fact, there would be no better time,
for you to leave a rating and review of this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
I'm Mike Carruthers. Thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know.
Welcome to the small town of Chinook, where faith runs deep and secrets run deeper. In this new
thriller, religion and crime collide when a gruesome murder rocks the isolated Montana community. Everyone is quick to point
their fingers at a drug-addicted teenager, but local deputy Ruth Vogel
isn't convinced. She suspects connections to a powerful religious group. Enter
federal agent VB Loro, who has been investigating a local church for
possible criminal activity. The pair form an unlikely partnership to catch the killer,
unearthing secrets that leave Ruth torn between her duty to the law,
her religious convictions, and her very own family.
But something more sinister than murder is afoot,
and someone is watching Ruth.
Chinook.
Starring Kelly Marie Tran and Sanaa Lathan.
Listen to Chinook wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Jennifer, a founder of the Go Kid Go Network.
At Go Kid Go, putting kids first is at the heart of every show that we produce.
That's why we're so excited to introduce a brand new show to our network called The Search for the Silver Lining. We'll see you next time.