It's '(The) Happening': Clouds carry drug-resistant bacteria
An aerial view shows fog enveloping construction sites in Sejong, South Korea. (Getty Images Photo)


The universally ridiculed 2008 M. Night Shyamalan film "The Happening" may have predicted one thing correctly: Clouds on the horizon are potentially ominous not because they signal an approaching storm – but because they were found in a recent study to carry drug-resistant bacteria over long distances, according to an of Canadian and French researchers.

"These bacteria usually live on the surface of vegetation like leaves or in soil," lead author Florent Rossi said in a telephone interview Friday.

"We found that they are carried by the wind into the atmosphere and can travel long distances – around the world – at high altitudes in clouds," he told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The discovery was published in last month's Science of The Total Environment edition journal.

The researchers from Laval University in Quebec City and Clermont Auvergne University in central France searched for antibiotic-resistant genes from bacteria found in cloud samples.

The samples were taken from an atmospheric research station perched 1,465 meters (4,806 feet) above sea level atop the Puy de Dome summit, a dormant volcano in central France, between September 2019 and October 2021.

An analysis of the retrieved mist revealed that they contained between 330 to over 30,000 bacteria per milliliter of cloud water, for an average of around 8,000 bacteria per milliliter.

They also identified 29 subtypes of antibiotic-resistant genes in the bacteria.

Drug resistance occurs when bacteria are exposed to antibiotics and develop immunity over generations.

Health authorities have repeatedly warned these adaptations are becoming what the study described as a "major sanitary concern worldwide," making it more complicated – in some cases impossible – to treat certain bacterial infections as antibiotics use continues to rise in health care and agriculture.

The study offered no conclusions on the potential health effects of the spread in the atmosphere of antibiotic-resistant bacteria – estimating that only five percent to 50% of the organisms could be alive and potentially active.

But Rossi suggested the risks are likely low.

"The atmosphere is very stressful for bacteria, and most of those we found were environmental bacteria," which are less likely to be harmful to humans, he explained. "So people shouldn't be afraid to walk in the rain."

"It's unclear if those genes would be transmitted to other bacteria," Rossi added.

Atmospheric monitoring, however, could help pinpoint the sources of drug-resistant bacteria – similar to wastewater tests for COVID-19 and other pathogens – "to limit their dispersal," he said.