Faculty bio | Lab website | 541-346-5279
Brendan Bohannan is an academic expert in climate change, sustainability, microbiology and health. A 2021 inductee into the American Association for the Advancement of Science, he studies microbes, from how they affect (or are affected by) climate change, to how they affect our health, especially when microbes that are meant to live outside are brought into indoor locations, like classrooms, hospitals, and schools through the air or by users of indoor spaces. A Google Science Communication Fellow, Brendan is also involved in multi-institutional efforts in South America and Africa to study soil microbes (bacteria, viruses, fungi, etc.) and how they fit into global warming as causes or consequences.
Recent Media:
Four UO faculty members are named fellows of the AAAS (Around the O, Jan. 28, 2022)
Can We Learn to Live With Germs Again? (The New York Times, April 23, 2021)
UO researchers urge changes in the language of the microbiome (Around the O, July 11, 2019)
Thousands of unexpected microbes break down our bodies after death (Science Magazine, Dec. 10, 2015)
Oregon study suggests some gut microbes may be keystones of health (Around the O, Nov. 15, 2015)
UO is co-leader in Amazon study of methane-related microbes (Around the O, Sept. 18, 2014)
The human body as an ecosystem (TEDxUOregon, March 2013)