After you die, your microbiome cooperates with soil microbes to 'recycle' your body

After you die, bacteria harvest your body for the nutrients that help push daisies.

A lone stone grave surrounded by wild summer flowers meadow with a stone wall in the background.
(Image credit: Andrew Rhodes / Alamy)

Each human body contains a complex community of trillions of microorganisms that are important for your health while you’re alive. These microbial symbionts help you digest food, produce essential vitamins, protect you from infection and serve many other critical functions. In turn, the microbes, which are mostly concentrated in your gut, get to live in a relatively stable, warm environment with a steady supply of food.

But what happens to these symbiotic allies after you die?

Jennifer DeBruyn
Professor of Environmental Microbiology, University of Tennessee

Jennifer DeBruyn is an environmental microbiologist at the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture. She studies the decomposition of human and animal mortalities and contaminant biodegradation. She co-directs “Backyard STEM”, a curriculum program for Tennessee 4-H agents focused on environmental-science education for youth.