jct6S2Yg

Viruses found in Antarctic air, including some new to science

2026-04-20T00:01:00+01:00

It may seem stark and lifeless, but the air around the remote sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia contains viruses, including some that are new to science. Using metagenomics, researchers discovered that South Georgia harbours a diverse and dynamic airborne viral community.

Get unlimited access to The Microbiologist

The Microbiologist provides detailed information on the latest research, topics, reviews, events and news on a wide variety of microbiological topics.

Subscribe

Members of Applied Microbiology International get unlimited access as a benefit. Find out more about AMI Membership

Subscription Promo Image

Food security

TylerVOF

From one bench to another: Representing early-career scientists at Parliament’s Voice of the Future

Tyler Myers, an MPhil Candidate at the University of Cambridge, reports back from the Royal Society of Biology’s Voice of the Future event at Parliament, where he served as a guest panelist representing Applied Microbiology International. 

Clean Water

Low-Res_asphalt

Is asphalt bad for our health? And can algae help?

2026-04-22T10:27:00+01:00By

Scientists studying how asphalt emissions impact respiratory health are also working on less toxic, lower-emitting asphalt formulations. One project involves growing a strain of algae that could reduce VOC emissions using wastewater from a treatment plant.

Low-Res_Coral PR Image 1

Lost millennium of Galápagos deep-sea corals linked to major Pacific climate shift

2026-04-21T14:58:00+01:00By

Scientists have discovered that deep-water corals in the Galápagos region vanished for more than 1,000 years before eventually recovering. The findings reveal that deep-water coral ecosystems may be more susceptible to climate change than previously thought.