AMRI scientists have been a part of a team of 900 international researchers that maps the “urban microbiome” of the world’s subway systems. This an atlas of microorganisms contains data from 60 different cities around the world.
New research from AMRI scientist Fabien Burki’s research group has been published this year, including a new discovery on the Meringosphaera, the enigmatic marine protist.
The Burki Lab authors:
Vasily V. Zlatogursky, Yegor Shɨshkin, Daria Drachko, Fabien Burki, Iker Irisarri, Jürgen Strassert, and Tom Williams.
Click on the Image to see the latest publishings from Burki Lab.
For more info on the Burki Lab, look here! https://www.burki-lab.net/
Burki Lab image: https://www.iob.uu.se/research/systematic-biology/burki-lab/
“NEVER BEFORE SEEN NUTRIENT EXCHANGES BETWEEN ALGAE AND BACTERIA.” NEW PUBLISHED STUDY FROM COLLABORATING RESEARCHERS AT NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY AND STOCKHOLM UNIVERSITY
AMRI co-PIs Rachel Foster and Martin Whitehouse of Stockholm University have recently published a study in collaboration with researchers at Newcastle University that explores a new look on microscopic algae-bacteria interactions.
Click the title or Stockholm University logo to read more!
AMRI scientists have been a part of a team of 900 international researchers that maps the “urban microbiome” of the world’s subway systems. This an atlas of microorganisms contains data from 60 different cities around the world.
AMRI scientists have been a part of a team of 900 international researchers that maps the “urban microbiome” of the world’s subway systems. This an atlas of microorganisms contains data from 60 different cities around the world.