With myopia - into Micropia

Categories: Microworld |

Micropia is the world's first interactive microbe zoo. It is located in Amsterdam, next to the Artis City Zoo. Here visitors can get acquainted with the life of organisms that are too small to see them with the naked eye. We offer to take a tour of Micropia.

With myopia - into Micropia
With myopia - into Micropia

In the zoo, you can scan your own body in order to detect your own germs.

Colonies of microbes living on human fingers are strictly individual (two people have no more than 13% of the species of such bacteria in common), which is used in the work of criminologists.

With myopia - into Micropia

The exhibition has a stand with 150 Petri dishes containing various microorganisms.

The Petri dish was invented in 1877 and received the name of its creator — the German bacteriologist Julius Richard Petri, assistant to the equally famous scientist Robert Koch.

With myopia - into Micropia

Diatoms (Triceratium sp.) in the process of photosynthesis generate the main amount of oxygen contained in the Earth's atmosphere.

During the mission of the Curiosity rover, scientists found that previously there were favorable living conditions for simple microorganisms on Mars.

With myopia - into Micropia

Cultures of microorganisms are grown in the Micropia laboratory.

Microbiomes (communities of microbes living in a separate organism) are closely related to the house where a person (and his family) lives. When people move, their unique microbiological "aura" moves with them.

With myopia - into Micropia

In the zoo, you can see 3D landscapes of microbe habitats.

At least 3,931 operational taxonomic units (species and groups of species) of microorganisms are found in the waters of Lake Willans (Antarctica).

With myopia - into Micropia

The Pilobolaceae family are fungi that reproduce in the excrement of herbivorous animals.

Pilobolus kleinii, decomposing the manure of herbivorous animals, shoot their spores with a record acceleration for nature — 180 thousand g, that is, 180 thousand times the acceleration of free fall.

With myopia - into Micropia

Couples in love can kiss and find out how many bacteria they passed on to each other during the kiss.

More than 700 types of microorganisms constantly live in the oral cavity of each person: various kinds of bacteria, protozoa, fungus, viruses.

With myopia - into Micropia

Noctiluca scintillans (Noctiluca scintillans) cause the glow of sea waves in the dark.

Noctuids — armored flagellates - account for half of the total weight of the Black Sea zooplankton. It is because of them that the waters of the Black Sea glow in autumn.

With myopia - into Micropia

Glass models of various viruses are demonstrated in Micropia. In the photo, a laboratory employee holds an HIV model, and the famous Ebola virus is visible on the right.

The monkey immunodeficiency virus (Simian immunodeficiency virus, SIV), carried by chimpanzees from the southeastern part of Cameroon, is closest to HIV group M - the cause of more than 90% of human infections.

With myopia - into Micropia

"Our goal is to show visitors that everything in nature is interconnected and that microbes are the most important part of these connections," says Haig Balyan, Director of Micropia.

The body of an adult weighing about 90 kilograms contains from 1 to 2.7 kilograms of microorganisms.

With myopia - into Micropia

Tardigrades are a species of microscopic invertebrates close to arthropods.

In 2008, it was found that slow walkers are able to survive even in outer space.

With myopia - into Micropia

Radiolaria is a single-celled planktonic organism.

Radiolarians, or ray-finders, live mainly in warm oceanic waters. The mechanism of their nutrition is practically not studied.

With myopia - into Micropia

Spiral staircases in Micropia reproduce the structure of DNA.

In 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick proposed a two-spiral model of the DNA molecule. "And we have just discovered the secret of life!" - this is how they reported their scientific achievement.

Keywords: Amsterdam | Zoo | Microbes

     

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