The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphere

Summary Microbial technology is exceptional among human activities and endeavours in its range of applications that benefit humanity, even exceeding those of chemistry. What is more, microbial technologists are among the most creative scientists, and the scope of the field continuously expands as ne...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kenneth Timmis, John E. Hallsworth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-01-01
Series:Microbial Biotechnology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.13976
_version_ 1798021895226916864
author Kenneth Timmis
John E. Hallsworth
author_facet Kenneth Timmis
John E. Hallsworth
author_sort Kenneth Timmis
collection DOAJ
description Summary Microbial technology is exceptional among human activities and endeavours in its range of applications that benefit humanity, even exceeding those of chemistry. What is more, microbial technologists are among the most creative scientists, and the scope of the field continuously expands as new ideas and applications emerge. Notwithstanding this diversity of applications, given the dire predictions for the fate of the surface biosphere as a result of current trajectories of global warming, the future of microbial biotechnology research must have a single purpose, namely to help secure the future of life on Earth. Everything else will, by comparison, be irrelevant. Crucially, microbes themselves play pivotal roles in climate (Cavicchioli et al., Nature Revs Microbiol 17: 569–586, 2019). To enable realization of their full potential in humanity’s effort to survive, development of new and transformative global warming‐relevant technologies must become the lynchpin of microbial biotechnology research and development. As a consequence, microbial biotechnologists must consider constraining their usual degree of freedom, and re‐orienting their focus towards planetary‐biosphere exigences. And they must actively seek alliances and synergies with others to get the job done as fast as humanly possible; they need to enthusiastically embrace and join the global effort, subordinating where necessary individual aspirations to the common good (the amazing speed with which new COVID‐19 diagnostics and vaccines were developed and implemented demonstrates what is possible given creativity, singleness of purpose and funding). In terms of priorities, some will be obvious, others less so, with some only becoming revealed after dedicated effort yields new insights/opens new vistas. We therefore refrain from developing a priority list here. Rather, we consider what is likely to happen to the Earth’s biosphere if we (and the rest of humanity) fail to rescue it. We do so with the aim of galvanizing the formulation and implementation of strategic and financial science policy decisions that will maximally stimulate the development of relevant new microbial technologies, and maximally exploit available technologies, to repair existing environmental damage and mitigate against future deterioration.
first_indexed 2024-04-11T17:20:59Z
format Article
id doaj.art-17b37943fa75442184843ab3daf9bf9c
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1751-7915
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-11T17:20:59Z
publishDate 2022-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Microbial Biotechnology
spelling doaj.art-17b37943fa75442184843ab3daf9bf9c2022-12-22T04:12:29ZengWileyMicrobial Biotechnology1751-79152022-01-0115117618510.1111/1751-7915.13976The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphereKenneth Timmis0John E. Hallsworth1Institute of Microbiology Technical University of Braunschweig Braunschweig GermanySchool of Biological Sciences Queen's University Belfast Belfast UKSummary Microbial technology is exceptional among human activities and endeavours in its range of applications that benefit humanity, even exceeding those of chemistry. What is more, microbial technologists are among the most creative scientists, and the scope of the field continuously expands as new ideas and applications emerge. Notwithstanding this diversity of applications, given the dire predictions for the fate of the surface biosphere as a result of current trajectories of global warming, the future of microbial biotechnology research must have a single purpose, namely to help secure the future of life on Earth. Everything else will, by comparison, be irrelevant. Crucially, microbes themselves play pivotal roles in climate (Cavicchioli et al., Nature Revs Microbiol 17: 569–586, 2019). To enable realization of their full potential in humanity’s effort to survive, development of new and transformative global warming‐relevant technologies must become the lynchpin of microbial biotechnology research and development. As a consequence, microbial biotechnologists must consider constraining their usual degree of freedom, and re‐orienting their focus towards planetary‐biosphere exigences. And they must actively seek alliances and synergies with others to get the job done as fast as humanly possible; they need to enthusiastically embrace and join the global effort, subordinating where necessary individual aspirations to the common good (the amazing speed with which new COVID‐19 diagnostics and vaccines were developed and implemented demonstrates what is possible given creativity, singleness of purpose and funding). In terms of priorities, some will be obvious, others less so, with some only becoming revealed after dedicated effort yields new insights/opens new vistas. We therefore refrain from developing a priority list here. Rather, we consider what is likely to happen to the Earth’s biosphere if we (and the rest of humanity) fail to rescue it. We do so with the aim of galvanizing the formulation and implementation of strategic and financial science policy decisions that will maximally stimulate the development of relevant new microbial technologies, and maximally exploit available technologies, to repair existing environmental damage and mitigate against future deterioration.https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.13976
spellingShingle Kenneth Timmis
John E. Hallsworth
The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphere
Microbial Biotechnology
title The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphere
title_full The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphere
title_fullStr The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphere
title_full_unstemmed The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphere
title_short The darkest microbiome—a post‐human biosphere
title_sort darkest microbiome a post human biosphere
url https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.13976
work_keys_str_mv AT kennethtimmis thedarkestmicrobiomeaposthumanbiosphere
AT johnehallsworth thedarkestmicrobiomeaposthumanbiosphere
AT kennethtimmis darkestmicrobiomeaposthumanbiosphere
AT johnehallsworth darkestmicrobiomeaposthumanbiosphere