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Microbes

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    • Microbes in dirt provide electricity for African villagers

      Providing electricity to people in countries where either the grid is not reliable, or nonexistent and unlikely ever to be built, can make a huge difference in people’s quality of life in very practical ways. We’ve written before about companies such as D.Light Design which have solar-powered replacements for kerosene lanterns , and efforts to bring small-scale solar panels to off-grid villages in Laos. Hand cranked cell phone chargers, radios and flashlights are other proven options that have received attention.

      Microbial Fuel Cells Provide Enough Power for Small Devices
      One option which is being investigated in a pilot project by Cambridge, Massachusetts company Lebônê Solutions is using microbial fuel cells to provide electricity to villagers in Tanzania. While the power produced by microbial fuel cells isn’t great, it does provide enough electricity for the small DC powered devices that the villagers want to run, Lebônê co-founder Hugo Van Vuuren told Technology Review. Compared to other renewable energy options such as solar panels or small-scale wind turbines they are also less expensive to produce and easier to set up.

      A What Type of Fuel Cell?
      Lebônê gives us a very basic rundown on how microbial fuel cells work:

      These inexpensive fuel cells run on animal and plant waste and naturally occurring soil microbes, and are framed around a flexible substrate (wood, steel, etc) that can vary by geographic availability. This is truly electricity right out of the ground. These fuel cells are used to charge a battery or cheap supercapacitor, which in turn will be used to power a high-efficiency efficient LED or PLED lamp.

      And Technology Review gives us a bit more detail:

      To make the fuel cell, the team put graphite cloth--the anode--in the bottom of a bucket along with chicken wire--the cathode--and microbe-laden waste, either mud, cow manure, or residue from coffee crops. A layer of sand acts as an ion barrier while salt water helps the protons travel more easily. The team adds a power management board (the only device that the villagers will most likely have to import, says [Lebônê co-founder Aviva] Presser) to regulate the power and send it to a battery. Such a fuel cell can run a cheap, efficient light-emitting diode (LED) for four to five hours per evening. "We're hoping the entire system will be around $10 when we're ready," says Presser.

      Namibia Next Up For Fuel Cell Trial
      After Tanzania, Lebônê’s second trial, funded by a $200,000 grant from the World Bank, will be an 18-month pilot project in Namibia where the the firm will couple their fuel cell design with the the next generation of LEDs.
      Providing electricity to people in countries where either the grid is not reliable, or nonexistent and unlikely ever to be built, can ... more

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      4 days ago
    • Barely Alive, Seafloor Microbes Might Resemble Exo-Organisms

      Deep below the sea floor live massive colonies of primitive microbes.
      Almost like one-celled zombies, these microbes use so little energy that it might be more accurate to call them undead rather than alive.

      Yet scientists think that the species might provide a model for life on other planets. Even on this planet, such microbes might account for a whopping 10 percent of the Earth's biomass.
      "In essence, these microbes are almost, practically dead by our normal standards," said Christopher House, a geosciences professor at Penn State University, and the lead author of the paper, in a release. "They metabolize a little, but not much."

      The cold, lightless and energy-poor conditions under the seafloor provide a promising research analog for the harsh conditions in subsurface Martian soil or near hydrothermal vents on Europa, Jupiter's second moon.
      "We do not expect the microbes in other places to be these microbes exactly," said House. "But, they could be living at a similar slow rate."
      Deep below the sea floor live massive colonies of primitive microbes. ... more

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      1 month ago
    • Canary in a Coal Mine MWV16

      Coral reefs are dying a death of a thousand cuts and their disappearance threatens not only the incredibly diverse ecosystem that depends on them, but also human health and welfare.

      In this episode of MicrobeWorld Video marine scientists Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, Ph.D., chair of marine studies at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, and Kiho Kim, Ph.D., director of the environmental studies program at American University, explain the important relationship between microbes and corals, and how this delicate symbiosis that sustains life on and around reefs is facing numerous threats from human interactions to global climate change. In addition, Tundi Agardy, Ph.D., founder and executive director of Sound Seas, discusses the need for public policy and community-based conservation efforts that may help stave off the degradation of these vital ocean ecosystems.

      According to a 2004 report issued by the World Wildlife Fund, 24% of the world's reefs are under imminent risk of collapse through human pressures; and a further 26% are under a longer term threat of collapse. If nothing is done to protect these resources, many scientists estimate that reefs around the West Indies in the Caribbean will be gone by 2020, while the Great Barrier Reef may only last for another three decades.

      Please visit the following sites for more information about coral reefs:

      www.climateshifts.org

      www.reefrelief.org

      www.coralreef.noaa.gov
      Coral reefs are dying a death of a thousand cuts and their disappearance threatens not only the incredibly diverse ecosystem that depe... more

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      4 days ago
    • Modern Transportation and Infectious Disease – MWV15

      From your local bus route to international air travel, infectious diseases can spread across the globe in a matter of hours. In this video podcast episode filmed at the Koshland Science Museum in Washington, D.C., Stephen Eubank from the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute of Virginia Tech and Daniel Lucey from Georgetown University discuss the role of transportation in the spread of disease and examine the effectiveness of various measures to curb transmission.

      Stephen Eubank, Ph.D., is a project director at the Network Dynamics and Simulation Science Laboratory at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute of Virginia Tech. His research focuses on modeling and simulating the spread of disease and regional transportation, and the analysis of complex systems.

      Daniel Lucey, M.D., M.P.H., is an adjunct professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Georgetown University, where he is co-director of the master of science program in biohazardous threat agents and emerging infectious diseases. In recent years, his teaching focus has been on SARS, avian flu, and the threat of pandemic human influenza.

      Resources:

      Learn more about infectious diseases at
      http://www.koshland-science-museum.org/exhib_infectious...

      Transportation Research Board of the National Academies
      http://www.trb.org/default.asp

      Pandemic Flu and Travel
      http://www.pandemicflu.gov/travel/index.html
      From your local bus route to international air travel, infectious diseases can spread across the globe in a matter of hours. In this v... more

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      56 minutes ago
    • The State of HIV/AIDS Education in America

      In this episode of MicrobeWorld Video we ask some leading researchers, education specialists, and public health officials about the state of HIV/AIDS education in America and ideas they have to support the teaching of microbial evolution using the latest HIV/AIDS research ó all while instilling innovative prevention strategies.

      Filmed at a forum for educators on February, 11, 2008 at the Koshland Science Museum in Washington, D.C. and at San Diego State University, this episode features the following experts:

      Roland Wolkowicz, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, San Diego State University, whose research focus is on the use of random peptide libraries and other chemical genetics approaches for the study of viral pathogenesis and the search of antiviral factors in HIV1 and HCV.

      Shannon Lee Hader, M.D., MPH, Director of the HIV/AIDS Administration for Washington, D.C., an epidemiologist and public health physician who has worked with HIV-infected children and adults in Brazil, Jamaica, and Zimbabwe.

      Anila Asghar, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Education at Johns Hopkins University, whose research focuses on curriculum development and evolution.

      Educational resources mentioned within the video can be found online at:

      Koshland Science Museum
      http://koshlandscience.org/teachers/webquest.jsp

      NIH Curriculum Guide
      http://science.education.nih.gov/supplements/nih1/Disea...

      Howard Hughes Medical Institute
      http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/

      Please feel free to embed or distribute this video.
      In this episode of MicrobeWorld Video we ask some leading researchers, education specialists, and public health officials about the st... more

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      10 hours ago
    • Terrestrial 'Alien' Lifeforms

      Scientists discover radiation-resistant bacterium which can withstand gamma-ray doses that are 1,000 times as great as what would be lethal for humans. Scientists discover radiation-resistant bacterium which can withstand gamma-ray doses that are 1,000 times as great as what would be l... more

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      3 months ago
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Microbes

csuspect rosyjane aschneider love_is_my_religion LindseyIndigo NeoDotCom mundosanto sublimeuniverse fiat_lux088 lcdoll920 LAHolly marcozarco stopnoise ufcguy75 critter dcsmitty khromadjo