Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
@microbial-child.bsky.social
52 followers 97 following 17 posts
Interdisciplinary group of researchers and artists, led by Zsuzsa Millei. Interested in microbes and biososcial perspective. Website: https://research.tuni.fi/ecepp/microbial-childhood-collaboratory-mcc
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Reposted by Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
unep.org
Prochlorococcus, a marine bacterium that is only 0.5–0.7 micrometers wide, produces more oxygen than all tropical rainforests combined.

Every tiny organism plays a key role in our planet's health.

On #WorldOceanDay, see how UNEP works to #SaveOurOcean: bit.ly/3Qk34aI
A microscopic image showing several green, circular to oval-shaped cells of the marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus. The cells have a layered appearance and are viewed under an electron microscope. Clusters of smaller dark dots, likely bacteria or cellular fragments, appear near the larger cells.
Reposted by Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
rcavaghan.bsky.social
Planetary Politics RT at #BISA2025 is packed, in teeny weenie room. Problematising of concepts of ownership, epistemology, 'dehumanisation' and so much more. This discussion is proving a smasher! With @flusterbird @anthonyburke‬ @ckweatherill @cameronharrington ‬ @hannahhughes @bisa-ecpwg
A photograph of a panel of 4 speakers, in small room packed with an audience of more than 20 people
Reposted by Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
isilova.bsky.social
🌀 What if education isn’t saving the world—
…but scripting its collapse?

In our new article, we ask whether global calls for “more education” are reinforcing the very systems driving ecological collapse.

📖 journals.sagepub.com/doi/epub/10....

#Unlearning #PlanetaryFutures #SDGs #MoreThanHuman
microbial-child.bsky.social
Biffe (bifidobacterium) said 'farewell' to children in Tahmela Daycare as our Microbial Childhood: Restor(y)ing Childhood Ecologies project is closing www.tuni.fi/en/research/... @isilova.bsky.social @nessling.fi @gronroos.bsky.social @riikkahohti.bsky.social @cssmicrobes.bsky.social
Reposted by Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
lukelukeluke.bsky.social
Here are some nice mushrooms
A stick covered in circular splitgill mushrooms that look like the gunshot wounds in the terminator that can turn into liquid metal. This stick has been turned upside down so we can see the gills. All photos by me
Reposted by Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
Reposted by Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
zebrafishrock.bsky.social
Confocal micrograph of a blind cavefish embryo. Credit to Dr. Mónica Folgueira Otero & @stevewilsonfish.bsky.social. #ZebrafishZunday 🧪
Confocal micrograph of a blind cavefish embryo at around five days post-fertilisation viewed from the side (lateral view). The cavefish Mexican tetra (Astyanax mexicanus) has a seeing and a blind form; the latter lives in dark environments, and relies on other senses. with an antibody that targets a calcium binding protein (calretinin) shown in green, which highlights different neuronal types and their processes in the nervous system. The blind cavefish has specially adapted traits that its sighted relation (dwelling near the surface) does not. These include a greater number of sensory receptors and taste buds along its body; these taste buds are also more efficient than the equivalent cells in the seeing cavefish. The eyes are still present at this stage of development but they will degenerate naturally during the lifetime of the fish as they live in a dark environment where eyes are redundant. Adult cavefish are blind. 2011 Wellcome Image Award winner. Text taken from Wellcome Collection. https://wellcomecollection.org/works/sgtfn677
Reposted by Microbial Childhood Collaboratory / Zsuzsa Millei
microbesinfo.bsky.social
Why #anthrax still haunts #Kenya’s #farmers and #vets ...

| #Bacillus | #bacteria | #pathogen | #contamination | Via nation .africa
nation.africa
microbial-child.bsky.social
“If the news is to be believed, microbes are a scary thing.” But are they? Read more in our blog on our funder, the Maj and Tor Nessling foundation website. Wonderful support from nessling.fi/en/microbes-... @nessling.fi @gronroos.bsky.social @flusterbird.bsky.social @isilova.bsky.social
There is a lego person in a child's hand and the lego's head is upside-down pressed into agar in a Petri dish tasting for microbial growth