Scientists at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science have unveiled groundbreaking research that illuminates the intricate relationships between human exposure to green spaces, mental well-being, and the composition of the nasal microbiome. This pioneering study, conducted within the museum’s own genomics laboratory, offers compelling evidence that the diversity and richness of nasal microbial communities are intimately linked with an individual’s time spent outdoors and their mental health status.
This research centers on the nasal microbiome—the complex ecosystem of microorganisms inhabiting the human nasal cavity—a subject that has historically received less attention compared to the gut microbiome. By targeting this overlooked microbial niche, the researchers sought to bridge significant gaps in our understanding of how environmental and lifestyle factors modulate microbiome composition and, in turn, impact psychological health.
The study’s design was both innovative and community-oriented. Over one hundred museum visitors voluntarily participated, providing nasal swab samples and detailed survey responses related to their mental well-being, outdoor activities, and pet ownership. These dual data streams permitted a nuanced correlation analysis between microbial signatures and individual lifestyle factors, shedding light on how everyday environmental exposures influence biological and mental health outcomes.
Using 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing, a cutting-edge molecular technique that enables precise taxonomic profiling of microbial communities, the scientists cataloged the diverse bacterial populations residing in the participants’ nasal passages. Concurrently, an interdisciplinary approach was employed to quantify green space exposure by mapping participants’ residential areas through satellite-derived vegetation indices, prepared by the museum’s earth sciences team.
Results revealed a significant correlation between proximity to and time spent in green environments and the complexity of the nasal microbiome. Individuals residing in greener neighborhoods exhibited a notably higher microbial diversity within their nasal cavities. This finding aligns with the prevailing hypothesis in microbiology that increased microbial richness is often indicative of a resilient and healthy microbiome, capable of better protecting against pathogens and modulating immune responses.
Notably, the data distinguished between different facets of nature exposure. While residential green space availability correlated with nasal microbial diversity, it was the actual duration of outdoor activity that demonstrated a stronger association with both nasal microbiome composition and improved mental health metrics. Participants reporting more hours spent outside—regardless of environmental greenness—showed lower levels of depressive symptoms, suggesting that the behavioral aspect of nature engagement strongly influences psychological well-being.
The interplay between nasal microbes and mental health emerging from this study may be mediated through immune and neurochemical pathways. Microbes residing in the nasal cavity can influence mucosal immunity and signal to the central nervous system via neural and inflammatory routes, potentially affecting mood and cognitive function. This connection opens intriguing possibilities that environmental exposures shape mental health through direct microbiome modulation.
Pet ownership also surfaced as an influential factor in altering the nasal microbial landscape. Interaction with animals, which introduces diverse microbial communities into the human environment, may enhance nasal microbial diversity and contribute to the observed benefits in psychological health. This highlights how everyday choices and environments dynamically sculpt our microbial and mental ecology.
Methodologically, the research leveraged the museum’s in-house genomic infrastructure, allowing for rapid, precise microbial sequencing and analysis in a public-facing context. The study exemplifies how public engagement in science can be seamlessly integrated with sophisticated research techniques, fostering community involvement while advancing scientific frontiers.
Importantly, the findings challenge traditional notions of “nature exposure,” emphasizing that not merely the quantity of nearby vegetation but active, sustained interaction with the outdoors is critical for optimizing the nasal microbiome and mental health. This insight underscores the potential for lifestyle interventions aimed at increasing outdoor activity to confer mental health benefits through microbiome modulation.
Bridget Chalifour, Ph.D., the lead investigator and a prominent genomics scientist at the museum, advocates for further research to elucidate the precise molecular mechanisms bridging nasal microbiota alterations and mental health outcomes. Such investigations could pioneer novel therapeutic approaches targeting the nasal microbiome for psychological well-being.
This study signals a new frontier in microbiome research, focusing attention on the nasal cavity as a pivotal interface between humans and their surrounding environments. By delineating how environmental exposures affect microbial communities with downstream impacts on mental health, it sets the stage for innovative public health strategies that integrate environmental, microbiological, and psychological sciences.
As the global scientific community increasingly recognizes the microbial world’s role in human health, this research contributes valuable insights that could reshape approaches to mental health promotion and urban planning. Encouraging outdoor activity and preserving green spaces might serve as accessible means to enhance microbial diversity and foster psychological resilience in modern populations.
Subject of Research: Associations among green space exposure, nasal microbiome composition, and mental well-being in humans.
Article Title: Nasal Microbiome Diversity Linked to Outdoor Time and Mental Health: Insights from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science Study.
News Publication Date: 2026 (presented at ASM Microbe 2026).
Keywords: Nasal microbiome, green space exposure, mental well-being, microbial diversity, 16S rRNA sequencing, outdoor activity, microbiota and mental health, environmental microbiology, public engagement in science, microbiome and immune regulation, pet ownership and microbiome, urban green spaces.
Tags: 16S rRNA gene sequencing in microbiome researchcommunity-based microbiome studyDenver Museum of Nature & Science researcheffect of pet ownership on nasal microbiotaenvironmental influences on human microbiomegreen space exposure and mental healthimpact of outdoor activities on microbiomemental well-being and microbial communitiesnasal microbiome and lifestyle factorsnasal microbiome and psychological healthnasal microbiome diversityrelationship between environment and nasal bacteria
