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The following information is about Microorganisms.

Microorganisms Defined

Microorganisms are tiny living organisms, only seen by microscope, that can cause acute health problems when consumed in drinking water.

This definition is in context to Water Filtration. See more contextual defintions for Microorganisms.


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Just how friendly are those probiotics in your food?

Published July 3, 2009, 7:45 pm, Seattle Times

As manufacturers add probiotics, the so-called "friendly" bacteria with health benefits, to many products, experts caution that the word "probiotic" is widely misused and misunderstood.

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Pollution, warmer seas hike red tide threat

Published July 3, 2009, 8:21 am, Worcester Telegram & Gazette

'The seas were red with blood." It would be a mistake to take this ancient Egyptian description literally. There was no human carnage or apocalypse, but rather an ocean plague of early blooming marine algae. Red tide is a scourge that has affected humans throughout the ages.

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Evidence mounts that Mars was once habitable

Published July 3, 2009, 1:24 am, The Arizona Republic

Scientists with the University of Arizona-led Phoenix Mars Mission are publishing research today that advances the theory that water once flowed and the Red Planet was once habitable.

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A zoo in your backyard

Published July 2, 2009, 5:42 pm, Summit Daily News

Composting at high altitude

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NASA ISS On-Orbit Status 2 July 2009

Published July 2, 2009, 3:29 pm, SpaceRef

All ISS systems continue to function nominally, except those noted previously or below.

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Connecticut Health Department Urges Food Safety When Grilling Outdoors

Published July 2, 2009, 10:08 am, Medical News Today

Summer is the season for sizzling - steaks, chicken, ribs, veggie kabobs and much more. The Connecticut Department of Public Health reminds everyone that food safety is essential when grilling outdoors and offers tips to ensure that family barbecues and backyard picnics remain fun, healthy outings.

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VY cuts output for maintenance

Published July 2, 2009, 8:16 am, Brattleboro Reformer

BRATTLEBORO -- Power output at Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant was reduced to 88 percent the past two days to allow technicians to chlorinate plant systems that use river water.

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EPA awards $165K research grant

Published July 2, 2009, 1:14 am, Daily News Journal

With a $165,000 grant from the Environmental Protection Agency, MTSU's Melissa Lobegeier will begin a two-year project to study water quality in the Clinch and Powell rivers of southwestern Virginia, where pollution from mining is a concern.

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Microalgae As A Source Of Alternative Energy

Published July 1, 2009, 9:24 pm, Science Daily

Scientists are researching the potential of mass production of microalgae as a crop.

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Grain News

Published July 1, 2009, 2:47 pm, Grainnet.com

Casco, Inc . is all about processing of corn products. As one of Canada’s biggest , and oldest, manufacturers of corn-refined ingredients such as sweeteners, starches, oil and animal feed, its products are used in over sixty industries from food and beverage to pharmaceuticals to paper manufacturing and animal nutrition.

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Are you looking for additional Water Filtration > Microorganisms news? Try our new "Microorganisms News Focus" area.

Off-site Microorganisms Links, User Submitted

The following links have been collected through user bookmark submission in the Microorganisms category. Please note, because these resources are off-site we cannot guarantee the accuracy or quality of any information.

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  • Extreme Life Thrives Where the Livin? Ain?t Easy | Wired Science | Wired.com: Once upon a time, scientists routinely found life in places where it wasn?t supposed to exist. That doesn?t happen anymore, and not because the pace of discovery has slowed. If anything, it?s accelerated. It?s simply become clear that life can exist almost anywhere on Earth. After 3 billion years of evolution, life has flowed into every last nook and cranny, from the bottom of the sea to the upper edge of the stratosphere. From blazing heat and freezing cold to pure acidity and atomic bomb-caliber radiation, there?s seemingly no stress so great that some bug can?t handle it. This gallery highlights a few particularly tough species of bacteria and archaea, a lesser-appreci ated but equally-vast branch of the organismal tree. Until the late 1970s, archaea was lumped in with bacteria, a confusion that speaks to the embryonic state of human microbial knowledge. Less than 1 percent of Earth?s microorganisms have been identified, and most of those won?t even grow in a lab.

Sun Jun 21

  • Bands of Iron: The winner of the 2009 Quark Award for science writing from 3QD. Humbling. "Eventual ly, evolution found a way, as evolution nearly always does, and oxygen was tamed to become a power source in an entirely new metabolic cycle. The oxygen-breathe rs arose, the remaining anaerobes retreated to the deep crevices of rocks and the sea, and life found a new equilibrium, with the balance of the atmosphere permanently changed. All the oxygen we breathe today is biologically produced, a tangible proof of life's power to reshape its own world. As well, these banded iron formations may be a metaphor for our own foolhardiness. In our time, we too are changing the composition of the planet's atmosphere, this time through the release of greenhouse gases. In the process, we are becoming the first species since the ancient photosynthetic bacteria to have such a global effect... Those bands of iron are a warning of what happens when life reshapes its own environment without thought for the consequences.& quot;

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  • Microbes May Be More Networked Than You Are: Wtf!?! "We are slowly, yet steadily, realizing that many bacteria produce nanowires. And the extracellular structures connecting bacterial cells into complex integrated communities create a pattern that looks suspiciously like a neural network. I believe we now stand at the edge of a new scientific frontier. The study of Electromicrobi ology will certainly provide new insights into the components, reactivity and roles of bacterial nanowires. Deeper knowledge of bacterial activity is tantamount to greater knowledge of our own bodies and the Earth... We?re still in the early stages of this research: Only six studies have been published on bacterial nanowires, but a number of intriguing possibilities exist about what role they could play in the bacterial world." - Yuri Gorby is an electromicrobi ologist at the J. Craig Venter Institute in San Diego

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Off-site Microorganisms Research Links

If you still need additional information on Microorganisms then we suggest the following off-site resources. Please note, because these resources are off-site we cannot guarantee the accuracy or quality of any information.

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