Bacteria are everywhere! On Earth, at
least. That includes land, air, and in the sea too! All seven of them. With
animals, the ones living in the sea are pretty different to the ones on land;
there aren't many tentacled land animals, for example! Most land animals
wouldn't be too happy if you dropped them in the middle of the atlantic, and
nearly all the fish would be similarly unhappy if you put them in the middle of
a car park. Is it the same with bacteria? How have marine microbes evolved to
survive and thrive in the deep?
This is the sea, in case you weren't sure! Taken from outside my house last week.
Last weekend was my birthday weekend! I'm now on lap 24 around the sun. I've not had time to settle back into normal life just yet, not helped by some mystery illness, but here's a quick post all about the awesome weekend I had! Complete with pictures!
It was a pretty perfect weekend, which is unusual for me as I'm not normally a big birthday person! Thank you, Ciara :) And my family too! And all my friends, especially the Nerds!
There are awesome animals in the world. There’s the big
famous ones like elephants and eagles, and there’s the really weird ones nobody
really hears about like the Mexican Mole Lizard or the Emerald Cockroach Wasp
(and if you don’t know about them, look them up, they’re awesome!). But they
are pretty hard to find; not just being elusive in their habitats, but in
having limited habitats. Even animals like kangaroos that are quite prolific in
their own habitat only cover a small percentage of the planet! There are loads
of them, and they’re big enough to spot from a distance, but I won’t be seeing
any in the wild unless I take a long journey. Bacteria, on the other hand, are
everywhere! And you get some really awesome ones of them too, especially ones
nobody ever hears about. They aren’t as big as kangaroos [citation needed] but if
you know how to find them you can see some fantastic ones!
I’m
apparently not satisfied with having a Blog, Twitter and YouTube, so got Instagram
too, after this twitter conversation:
I was just throwing the idea of 1
minute videos out there, not even knowing that 1 minute is the Instagram video
length limit, but it’s actually been really fun doing them! I’ve done a few so
far (I’ll embed them at the bottom of this in case you have like four minutes
to spare) and I’m having fun with it. It’s a big challenge, and I think once I
run out of all the short basic things to cover it’ll get even harder (as things
normally take days, not minutes!) but I love a challenge, and this one is
pretty fun! And hopefully worthwhile if it gets more people thinking about
microbiology stuff.
So far I haven’t really settled on
a specific style, or level at which I’m pitching things, but I’m hoping to make
it accessible to everyone no matter their background. Microbiology affects everyone,
so everyone should know about it! It’s also really interesting and exciting but
isn’t really thought of like that.
Also of course there’s my
long-term selfish goal of gaining confidence by doing these videos and things.
I’m already feeling some benefits but I’ve got a hugely long way to go!
Anyway, here are the videos I've made so far (with bonus new one I made today!):
And the new one...
I hope you like it! Subscribe to the YouTube for more, or follow my Instagram.
This is my fiftieth blog post! What?! It's gone so fast! It's also pretty dead-on six months (give or take a day or three) since I started. It's flown by! I thought I'd mark it by doing a post of ten things I've learnt over the last fifty posts/six months. (I've only actually thought of nine right now but I'm hoping one will come to me as I write the rest!)
So here we go:
When we think of aliens we think of invaders from other worlds, Sigourney Weaver being badass and Arnold Schwarzenegger directing people towards waiting air transport (while also being badass). But, at least in our own solar system, it's most likely that any life we find out there will be microbial. This makes sense; they're much better at living in conditions different to the normal Earth ones! We may have warm jumpers and air conditioning, but there aren't many people who are happy to reproduce in acid lakes or at the bottom of the ocean in hydrothermal vents. Microbes 1, Humans 0.
So are we going to all get crazy space diseases if they come to Earth, much like the end of War of the Worlds when the aliens all get flu?
I'm not an expert in this, I just think it's a cool topic so wanted to write a post on it! There's a lot more to say so it might return in the future, like alien herpes.
In line with my earlier post (http://friendlybacteriablog.blogspot.co.uk/2016/08/speaking-science.html) on the scientific language and the barrier it imposes, even the names of microbes pose a problem for this. Especially as they're often a mix of Latin, Greek and Science, which just confuses everyone even more. We call Ursus arcticus a brown bear, Canis lupus familiaris a dog, but there aren't any easy familiar words for microbes. Apart from Yeast, the rockstar of the microbial world, things are either referred to by the name of the disease they cause or just by the long, hard-to-say binomial names. Is that fair?