A groundbreaking study conducted by researchers from the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare and the University of Eastern Finland has revealed an innovative approach to reshaping the indoor microbiome of urban homes—simply by introducing forest soil onto doormats. This pioneering intervention effectively shifted the microbial environment indoors closer to outdoor bacterial profiles, thereby reducing the prevalence of human-associated bacteria within living spaces. Such ecological remodeling promises to unlock novel avenues for health promotion, particularly for urban populations increasingly distanced from natural microbial exposures.
The impetus for this research stems from growing evidence that early-life microbial exposures profoundly influence immune system development. Childhood is typically spent indoors where microbial diversity is limited, especially in tightly sealed urban homes. This sanitized environment can result in decreased encounters with environmental microbes that play a critical role in calibrating immunoregulatory pathways during pivotal developmental windows. Notably, an impoverished home microbiome has been linked to a heightened risk of inflammatory conditions, including asthma and allergic diseases, motivating the search for feasible strategies to restore beneficial microbial contact indoors.
In this proof-of-principle study, the scientists deployed a remarkably uncomplicated yet effective method: forest soil harvested from natural environments was applied thrice at four-week intervals onto entryway rugs in five urban Finnish homes. A sixth home served as the control, receiving no soil additions. By tracking microbial populations over time, the team sought to determine whether forest-associated bacterial communities could be transferred and maintained within indoor air and dust matrices, ultimately influencing the overall microbiome composition of these households.
The experimental design included systematic sampling of house dust before and after soil application, with collection points set at different breathing heights to capture potential variances in microbial exposure for infants and adults, who inhabit distinct vertical niches in the home. Advanced DNA sequencing coupled with quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) assays allowed for comprehensive characterization of bacterial taxa present, enabling precise quantification and comparison of environmental and human-associated microbes.
Findings demonstrated a significant uptick in the relative abundance of forest soil bacteria at multiple spatial locations throughout the homes following the intervention. Strikingly, the strongest effects emerged near the infant breathing zone closest to the treated rug during the initial two weeks post-application, where microbial diversity soared. Concurrently, there was a notable decline in bacteria typically linked to human occupancy, suggesting that environmental microbes can displace human-associated strains when introduced effectively.
One of the study’s pivotal metrics, the Farm-home Resembling Microbiota Index (FaRMI), previously correlated with protective immunological outcomes and reduced asthma risk, exhibited substantial elevation in the infant breathing zone after forest soil application. This indicated not only successful microbial transfer but also an enriching of the indoor microbiome with bacterial communities conducive to long-term respiratory health. Such an enhancement of bacterial diversity aligns with the hygiene hypothesis, positing that increased exposure to diverse microbial environments during early life reduces immune-mediated diseases.
Lead author and Chief Researcher Martin Täubel emphasized the novelty and potential significance of these results by highlighting how a simple, low-cost intervention such as applying forest soil to household doormats could modulate airborne microbial exposure profiles meaningfully. Importantly, these effects were sustained long enough to influence infant breathing height, a critical consideration given the vulnerability of developing respiratory systems in early childhood.
Senior author Pirkka Kirjavainen, a University Researcher, underscored the translational promise of the approach. He remarked that these encouraging preliminary findings provide a foundation for future investigations aimed at determining whether modifying household microbiomes through environmental microbiota transfer can concretely translate into measurable health benefits, particularly for pediatric asthma and allergy prevention.
This study’s technical rigor, combining high-throughput sequencing with qPCR and sophisticated bioinformatic analysis, sets a new benchmark for indoor microbiome intervention research. The method offers scalability and adaptability for urban households seeking to reintroduce beneficial biodiversity without disruptive infrastructural modifications or complex installations. It presents a paradigm shift in how environmental health science views the indoor ecosystem—not as a sterile bubble, but as a modifiable interface that can be engineered to foster health.
The implications extend beyond childhood immune development. Considering the increasing global urbanization trend and associated rise in immune-related disorders, the capacity to safely and effectively recalibrate indoor microbial communities offers vast public health potential. Integrating natural environmental microbiota into built environments could stimulate resilient immune phenotypes and potentially diminish the burden of chronic inflammatory and allergic illnesses on healthcare systems.
Published in the esteemed journal Microbiome on March 25, 2026, this research enriches our understanding of the bidirectional interchange between outdoor and indoor microbial landscapes. Its innovative approach opens new scientific discussions about leveraging natural biodiversity to counteract the microbial impoverishment inherent in modern urban living spaces.
For those interested in visualizing the study and its methodology, a supplementary video titled “Environmental microbiota transfer from forest soil into urban homes: a proof-of-principle study” is available, providing an engaging overview of the experimental process and key findings.
As this line of inquiry progresses, future research will aim to optimize application frequency, microbial source selection, and measure tangible health endpoints. Nevertheless, this proof-of-concept trial convincingly demonstrates that simple modifications to the home environment can shift urban indoor microbiomes towards a more diverse and health-associated composition, heralding a new era in environmental microbiome science and preventive medicine.
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Subject of Research: Environmental microbiota transfer and indoor microbiome modulation for health promotion.
Article Title: Environmental microbiota transfer from forest soil into urban homes: a proof-of-principle study.
News Publication Date: 25-Mar-2026.
Web References:
DOI link
Keywords: indoor microbiome, forest soil bacteria, urban homes, microbial diversity, asthma prevention, childhood immune development, environmental microbiota transfer, Farm-home Resembling Microbiota Index, immunoregulatory pathways, inflammatory diseases, urban health, soil-on-rug intervention.
Tags: asthma and allergy preventionearly-life microbial exposure benefitsecological remodeling of living spacesenvironmental microbiota introductionforest soil doormat interventionimmune system development and microbesindoor microbial ecologyindoor microbiome transformationmicrobiome restoration techniquesreducing indoor human-associated bacteriaurban health promotion strategiesurban home microbial diversity



