Welcome to Microscopic Microbes!

Welcome to Microscopic Microbes! Over the last few days, the project has had a big increase in members, and many new observations have been added! Thank you to all of you who have participated, especially @biohexx1.

Many microorganisms are hard to ID by species, so if anyone knows an ID for a observation in this project that cannot get a place in the Most Observed Species column, give it an ID!

Finally, Thank You for taking part in this project.

Publicado el diciembre 16, 2015 04:55 TARDE por tiskolin tiskolin

Comentarios

Publicado por biohexx1 hace más de 8 años
Publicado por biohexx1 hace más de 8 años
Publicado por biohexx1 hace más de 8 años

Thank you! I will put these in the next journal post. Diatoms are very common, so these websites will be a help to anybody using Microscopic Microbes.

Publicado por tiskolin hace más de 8 años

I’m thinking about getting a microscope and documenting what I find in my local rivers, creeks, lakes, and even soil. Are there any recommendations for decent microscopes for observing the microbes? Or what features should I look for? I’m posting here since I didn’t see any relevant journal posts yet, and I plan on coming back here for the guides when I do post. Thanks!

Publicado por observerjosh hace alrededor de 1 año

Microscopes can range from $20 like this one on Amazon:
Carson MicroFlip 100x-250x LED and UV Lighted Pocket Microscope with Flip Down Slide Base and Smartphone Digiscoping Clip (MP-250)

all the way to the thousands of dollars. It just depends on how much you want to spend. For eukaryotic organisms, the above should be fine. For bacteria, which I don't recommend working with until you've had a microbiology course, you would need a scope that magnifies 1000x.

Publicado por biohexx1 hace alrededor de 1 año

I had a microbiology and cell bio course with extensive microscope use… way before anything was digital. I mostly intend on taking samples home and observing there rather than observing in the field. I was looking for something in the 1000x range, but there are so many options with screens, outputs/signals to mobile devices, filters, etc. I was planning on spending $100-$200, but I just need the ability to photograph (maybe video) and export to a device where I can upload to iNaturalist. I know some bacteria doesn’t show up well without various stains, so I’m not too concerned with those right now, mostly eukaryotic, but want them large enough to identify.

Publicado por observerjosh hace alrededor de 1 año

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