By Sean Mowbray Invisible in their trillions, microbes dwell in our bodies, grow in soils, live on trees and are integral to ...
This article originally appeared on Undark. As a teenager growing up in Nigeria, Helen Onyeaka was obsessed with microorganisms. The tiny lifeforms, which include bacteria and yeast, can be grown ...
Metagenomic sequencing of tree bark microbiota indicated their ability to process some atmospheric gases, highlighting their ...
Lucy M. Stitzer is the founder and editor of Dirt-To-Dinner. Its mission is to help consumers better understand how their food is grown and processed, and why this is important to them and their ...
Locals and visitors should not come into contact with waters where there is a visible bloom, the Florida Department of Health ...
Cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, occur worldwide in many varieties, including in single-cell form and in chains called filaments. While these tiny life forms can strongly influence many ...
Sea moss, a spiny red algae also known as Irish moss or Chondrus crispus, has gained attention as a potential wellness ...
Living longer, healthier lives starts with understanding the oldest life forms on Earth The post What Do Microbes Have to Do with How We Age? Everything, Actually first appeared on The Walrus.
Pink lakes in Western Australia get their color from pigments produced by microbes, but climate change and other human threats are killing these tiny organisms. When you purchase through links on our ...
The Florida Department of Health in Osceola County issued a health alert on Jan. 9, due to harmful blue-green algae toxins ...
New research reveals how ocean viruses burst algae cells, fueling a subsurface oxygen band through rapid microbial recycling.