Your mouth is a zoo of bacteria. And in a new series of astonishing (ly disturbing) images assembled by a team of researchers, we get to experience this diverse biome in all its psychedelic, multicolored glory — with each funky color representing a different species of bacteria, as Science Alert reports.

"The tongue is particularly important because it harbors a large reservoir of microbes and is a traditional reference point in medicine," said Jessica Mark Welch, co-author of the study published in the journal Cell Reports and microbial ecologist at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Massachusetts, in a statement. "'Stick out your tongue' is one of the first things a doctor says."

"We think that learning who is next to who will help us understand how these communities work," Welch added.

The species range from Streptococcigreen around the edges of the tongue where they can gobble up oxygen, shown in green, to actinomyces, which thrive in an anaerobic environment away from the edges, in red. Rothia, shown in cyan, keeps away from either of those border regions.

In total, there are more than 700 species of bacteria that call our mouths their home. however, the three genera of bacteria identified above were found in 80 percent of the 21 healthy tongues the researchers collected samples from.

To separate these oxygen-rich and -poor environments, the bacteria form layers of protective slime referred to as "biofilm."

"Bacteria behave differently in a biofilm," co-author Mark Welch said. "There are parts of their metabolism they only turn on in a biofilm, and they tend to be more resistant to antibiotics and changes in the environment."

The scientists' research also suggests that small bumps on the surface of the human tongue exist to allow certain kinds of bacteria to create nitric oxide, an important chemical for controlling blood pressure — a process that the human body isn't capable of taking care of by itself.

READ MORE: Incredible Images Show How Bacteria Set Up Tiny Colonies on Your Tongue [Science Alert]

More on the tongue: IBM Unveils New “Electronic Tongue” to Taste and Identify Liquids


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