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#engineers

1 Beitrag1 Beteiligte*r0 Beiträge heute

Super-resolution microscopes showcase the inner lives of #cells. Advanced light #microscopy techniques have come into their own — and are giving scientists a new understanding of #human #biology and what goes wrong in disease.

Optics #engineers and #physicists have developed sophisticated tricks to overcome the diffraction limit of light microscopes, opening up a new world of detail. These “super-resolution” light microscopy techniques can distinguish objects down to 100 nanometers and sometimes even less than 10 nanometers.

knowablemagazine.org/content/a

Knowable Magazine | Annual ReviewsSuper-resolution microscopes showcase the inner lives of cellsAdvanced light microscopy techniques have come into their own — and are giving scientists a new understanding of human biology and what goes wrong in disease

#MarineFungi Could Eat #PlasticPollution, Helping to Clean Our #Oceans and #Beaches

Learn more about the marine #fungi that could be conditioned to help clean up #Hawaii’s beaches.

By Monica Cull
Feb 14, 2025 4:00 PMFeb 14, 2025 4:01 PM

"Hawaii is home to some of the world’s most beautiful landscapes. Striking blue waters, lush jungles, and pristine beaches make it a paradise. It’s also home to other unique inhabitants, such as sea turtles, dolphins, and… plastics?

"According to a new study from the University of Hawai‘i (UH) at Mānoa, plastics are becoming the most prevalent form of pollution in the ocean, which can be detrimental to marine species and their habitat. However, researchers from UH discovered a fungus from Hawai‘i’s nearshore environment that may have the ability to break down plastics, and to top it off, they may be conditioned to do it faster. The findings were recently published in Mycologia.

" 'Plastic in the environment today is extremely long-lived and is nearly impossible to degrade using existing technologies,' said Ronja Steinbach, lead author of the study and a marine biology undergraduate student at the UH Mānoa College of Natural Sciences, in a press release.

"Marine fungi may be a term you’ve never heard before. This is likely due to the fact that less than 1 percent of marine fungi are known to science.

" 'Our research highlights marine fungi as a promising and largely untapped group to investigate for new ways to recycle and remove plastic from #nature. Very few people study fungi in the ocean, and we estimated that fewer than one percent of marine fungi are currently described,' said Steinbach in the press release.

"For this study, the research team looked at marine fungi found in #corals, #seaweed, #sand, and #sponges from Hawai’i’s nearshore. And they hope that the fungi could help degrade plastics in the marine environment.

" 'Fungi possess a superpower for eating things that other organisms can’t digest (like #wood or #chitin), so we tested the fungi in our collection for their ability to digest plastic,' said Anthony Amend, Pacific Biosciences Research Center professor and co-lead author of the study, in a press release.

The Hungry Fungi

"The team exposed the fastest-growing fungi to small dishes filled with #polyurethane, a common plastic, and noted if and how fast the fungi would consume it. The team also 'experimentally evolved' the fungi to see if they would grow and consume more polyurethane the more they were exposed to the plastic.

" 'We were shocked to find that more than 60 percent of the fungi we collected from the ocean had some ability to eat plastic and transform it into fungi,' Steinbach said in a press release. 'We were also impressed to see how quickly fungi were able to adapt. It was very exciting to see that in just three months, a relatively short amount of time, some of the fungi were able to increase their feeding rates by as much as 15 percent.'

"The research team is currently working to see if these marine fungi can break down other forms of plastics, such as #polyethylene and #PolyethyleneTerephthalate. They’re also trying to understand how, at a molecular level, these fungi can degrade these plastics.

" 'We hope to collaborate with #engineers, #chemists, and #oceanographers who can leverage these findings into actual solutions to clean up our beaches and oceans,' said Steinbach in a press release.

discovermagazine.com/environme

Discover Magazine · Marine Fungi Could Eat Plastic Pollution, Helping to Clean Our Oceans and BeachesVon Monica Cull

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8 Signs It's Time to Hire a New QA Tester Today - AtheosTech
Are customer complaints increasing? Missing deadlines due to undetected issues? These are just a few signs it’s time to hire qa testers. At AtheosTech, we connect you with experienced professionals who ensure your product is bug-free and user-ready. Don’t risk your reputation.

#qualiyuassurancetester #qualitytester #brand #engineers #marketing #atheostech #usa #hireqasoftware tester #hireqatestersexpert#hireqatesters

“A job in industry is also now harder to attain. Modern #factories are high-tech, run by #engineers and #technicians. In the early 1980s #BlueCollar assemblers, machine operators and repair workers made up more than half of the #manufacturing workforce.

Today they account for less than a third. #Whitecollar professionals outnumber blue-collar factory-floor workers by a wide margin. Even once obtained, a #FactoryJob is far less likely to be unionised than in previous decades, with membership having fallen from one in four workers in the 1980s to less than one in ten today.

In order to find the modern equivalent of such jobs, we looked for #employment with the same traits. What offers decent #pay, #unionisation, requires no #degree and can soak up the male workforce?

The result: mechanics, repair technicians, security workers and the skilled trades.”

<archive.md/L1J7W> (paywall) / <economist.com/finance-and-econ>

Fortgeführter Thread

Open science forms the pillar for mankind to invent a better world, and a society worth living in. Or so it should be, if academia weren’t held captive or willing prisoner to commercial interests. Fediverse opens new grazing grounds for #scientists, #engineers, or anyone for that matter, to uncover new #wisdom and #insights collectively.

If only more #OpenScience tools would add #ActivityPub support to join our #fediverse.

But we have @bonfire Open Science app, and @scifed as early adopters.

Antwortete im Thread

@metin
The reason it was "less drastic than anticipated" was because serious engineers didn't deny the issue, they got together and made sure that it didn't become a problem.

It is what responsible folks do when the forecast is for real problems. Its science and engineering at work.

What everyone else saw was the marketing oversell.

What we have now with #climateChange is the political boy and girls trying to stop real #scientist and #engineers from working on the problem.