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Gender‐neutral bathroom surfaces recolonized by microbes more quickly than single‐gender bathrooms
Author(s) -
Qureshi S.S.,
Kedo M.,
Berthrong S.T.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
letters in applied microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.698
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1472-765X
pISSN - 0266-8254
DOI - 10.1111/lam.13316
Subject(s) - microbiome , human microbiome , ecology , built environment , biology , social psychology , psychology , genetics
As humans become increasingly urban and spend more time inside the built environment, there will be increased interactions between humans and shared public surface microbiomes. Recent cultural changes in the United States have led to increased numbers of gender‐neutral bathrooms. Given that bathroom surfaces are frequently sanitized, we used this increased availability of gender‐neutral bathrooms to examine how single‐gender or gender‐neutral surfaces are recolonized with microbes. Given that male and female microbiomes vary, we hypothesized that rates of recolonization would differ between male, female and gender‐neutral bathroom surfaces. We collected swabs from common hand‐contacted surfaces in bathrooms and cultured microbes on selective and rich media to determine microbial abundance after cleaning. Recolonization was dominated by Gram‐positive bacteria and was slowest on male, intermediate on female and fastest on gender‐neutral surfaces. These results imply that gender‐neutral surfaces approach normal climax microbial communities more quickly than single‐gender bathrooms. Significance of Impact of the Study Humans now spend substantial amount of time within the built environment, and as a consequence the human microbiome interacts frequently with indoor surfaces. Social changes are making gender‐neutral public bathrooms more common, so it is important to study how humans and microbiomes interact with these bathroom surfaces. We found that the gender‐neutral bathroom surfaces recolonize more quickly than single‐gender, which suggests that there are more potential human‐surface microbiome connections in these public spaces. These results will potentially add a new layer to our understanding of the interactions of humans, our microbiomes and how we design our built environment.

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