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AMI Member Survey reveals strong global engagement and growing demand for career support

2026-06-11T09:25:00+01:00

Applied Microbiology International (AMI) has published the results of its 2026 Member Survey, revealing a highly engaged and increasingly international membership community, while highlighting new opportunities to strengthen accessibility, visibility and participation across the organisation.

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    Microscope breakthrough will open unprecedented view into cells

    In a landmark achievement in biological imaging, researchers have announced the successful demonstration of the laser phase plate, a novel device that dramatically improves the contrast of images produced by cryo-electron microscopes, opening up an entirely new view of human biology.

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    Exploring potential of virovory in combating harmful algal blooms

    Toxic cyanobacterial blooms can close lakes, contaminate drinking water and pose risks to human health. A new project is exploring an unlikely tool for mitigating these blooms: virovory, the phenomenon of organisms eating viruses as a food source.

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    Ask the expert: World Cup travel and Ebola risk

    Luis Ostrosky, MD, division chief of infectious diseases at McGovern Medical School at UTHealth Houston and chief epidemiology officer for Memorial Hermann Health System addresses the Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda and how the United States could be affected through travel.

Food security

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Degradable sensors reveal hidden soil secrets

New degradable sensors being developed by soil scientists track biological activity in soil by having a degradable substrate that is nibbled on by microbes. 

Clean Water

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Exploring potential of virovory in combating harmful algal blooms

2026-06-11T14:33:00+01:00By

Toxic cyanobacterial blooms can close lakes, contaminate drinking water and pose risks to human health. A new project is exploring an unlikely tool for mitigating these blooms: virovory, the phenomenon of organisms eating viruses as a food source.

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Microbial research captured among winning science images

2026-06-10T16:00:00+01:00By

Microbial research features among some of the winning images in Nature’s 2026 Scientist at Work photography competition. Microbiome sampling of whale sharks, algal blooms, and a coral probiotics village feature among five spectacular images showcasing the diversity and challenges of scientific research.