Why Are There So Many Species Of Bugs, But So Few Species Of Human?

Edit IFL Science 16 Sep 2016
Looking around at the natural world, have you ever wondered why some groups of organisms contain huge numbers of species while others are seemingly barren?. Take insects as an example, animals which evolved around 480 million years ago ... Contrast this with Methanopyri, in the Kingdom Archaea, for which there is only a single species (Methanopyrus kandleri) which evolved close to 4 billion years ago ... Next Page Next Page Full Article ....

UNSW staff honoured in national awards for teaching excellence (UNSW - The University of New South Wales)

Edit Public Technologies 14 Sep 2016
(Source. UNSW - The University of New South Wales). The passion and commitment of UNSW teaching staff to create unique and exciting ways to enhance student learning has been recognised in national awards for teaching excellence ... Her work looks at the molecular genetics of microbes, understanding how plasmid DNA is inherited in Archaea, and how molecular markers can be used to trace sources of water pollution ... (noodl. 35347584) ....

Box C/D RNAs recognize maximum 10 nt of substrates [Biochemistry]>

Edit PNAS 13 Sep 2016
Box C/D RNAs guide site-specific 2′-O-methylation of RNAs in archaea and eukaryotes. The spacer regions between boxes C to D′ and boxes C′ to D contain the guide sequence that can form a stretch of base pairs with substrate RNAs. The lengths of spacer regions and guide-substrate duplexes are variable... ....

Survive as Long as You Can in this Pit of Robotic Spiders

Edit Kotaku 09 Sep 2016
If you're looking for a bit of throwaway fun this Friday afternoon, why not see how long you can survive in a pit of spiders? If you're not up for the full arachnid bath experience, the next best thing is Archaea Terata ... ....

Studying a Salt-loving Microbe, Penn Senior Evan Yang Imagines Life on Mars (University of Pennsylvania)

Edit Public Technologies 26 Aug 2016
(Source. University of Pennsylvania). By Niharika Gupta and Katherine Unger Baillie ... 'If students are excited about science, whether or not they have the experience doesn't matter as much ... Yang's project took this approach in order to identify and characterize genes responsible for how single-celled microorganisms called archaea move, a relatively unexplored area of microbiology research and one in which Pohlschröder's team specializes....

Our bodies are mostly bacteria. A new book reveals this crucial, invisible world.

Edit Vox 25 Aug 2016
When Antony van Leeuwenhoek, the late 17th-century drape maker turned amateur scientist, first described microbes, people thought he was crazy ... And he became the very first person to see a teeming world of life previously inaccessible to the human eye. We’d later learn that this vast system of bacteria, fungi, archaea, and other microbes is vital to life on Earth, and that we've actually evolved from and with these organisms ... Ed Yong ... ....

Australia-India partnership to boost methane gas yields (Engineers Australia)

Edit Public Technologies 24 Aug 2016
(Source. Engineers Australia). Australian researchers and engineers will trial a breakthrough that promises to dramatically increase gas yields from coal seams and biogas plants, thanks to a partnership with India's largest oil and gas producer ... These 'methanogenic archaea' live in coal seams and on organic waste, producing one billion tonnes of biogas a year ... Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 24 August 2016 02.38.01 UTC....

Australian gas-generating microbe breakthrough to help power India (UNSW - The University of New South Wales)

Edit Public Technologies 23 Aug 2016
(Source. UNSW - The University of New South Wales). A novel research solution that promises to dramatically increase gas yields from coal seams and biogas plants will be trialled for industrial application for the first time in India ... These 'methanogenic archaea' live in coal seams and on organic waste, producing one billion tonnes of biogas a year ... 'It's simple. If the microbes grow faster, they emit more methane,' he said ... (noodl....

Oklahoma education notes for Sunday, Aug. 21, 2016

Edit The Oklahoman 21 Aug 2016
Application deadlines changed. for federal student aid requests. The deadline for current and future college students to file the Free Application for Federal Student Aid is coming five months earlier this year. The priority deadline to file FAFSA and get in line to be considered for a state grant for the 2017-18 academic year is Oct. 1 ... The U.S ... FROM STAFF REPORTS ... archaea, bacteria and eucarya that includes plants and animals....

Four-billion-year-old genetic code reconstructed by OSU scientist (Oklahoma State University)

Edit Public Technologies 09 Aug 2016
(Source. Oklahoma State University) ... Archaea, Bacteria, and Eucarya that includes plants and animals ... An influential, but hotly debated, notion is that modern Archaea living in extreme environments most resemble LUCA ... 'Our work reveals that the set of transfer RNA molecules in LUCA closely resembles that in present day Archaea. In this respect, the primordial character referred to in the name of Archaea seems very appropriate.' ... (noodl....

How the Microbes Inside Us Went From Enemies To Purported Superhealers

Edit National Public Radio 09 Aug 2016
i ... E ... Stephanie Schuller/Science Source hide caption ... E ... He explains how these resident bacteria, fungi, archaea and viruses, known collectively as the microbiome, form intimate partnerships with their hosts — contributing to everything from the glow of a squid's light organ to the development of our own immune systems ... ....

How the world’s tiniest organisms explain our evolution, our health, and our eventual demise

Edit Vox 09 Aug 2016
When Antony van Leeuwenhoek, the late 17th-century drape maker turned amateur scientist, first described microbes, people thought he was crazy ... And he became the very first person to see a teeming world of life previously inaccessible to the human eye. We’d later learn that this vast system of bacteria, fungi, archaea, and other microbes is vital to life on Earth, and that we've actually evolved from and with these organisms ... Ed Yong ... ....

East Tennessee Student and Faculty Author Article in Journal of Bacteriology (ASPH - Association of Schools of Public Health)

Edit Public Technologies 04 Aug 2016
(Source. ASPH - Association of Schools of Public Health). Mr. Sean Stacey, doctor of philosophy in biomedical sciences student, and Dr ... [Dr. Chris Pritchett (left) and Mr. Sean Stacey] ... A characteristic of some P ... P ... The Journal of Bacteriology publishes research articles that probe fundamental processes in bacteria, archaea and viruses, the molecular mechanisms by which they interact with each other and with their hosts and environments....
×