Air pockets in a sponge mimic healthy soil, which has various nooks and crannies to host microbial communities. Michael Bihlmayer / EyeEm via Getty Images Scientists have discovered a common household ...
Even if you know instinctively that your kitchen sponge can get pretty nasty, the numbers still might shock you: 54 billion ...
From human intestines to the bottom of the sea: Microorganisms populate nearly any habitat, no matter how hostile it is. Their great variety of survival strategies is of huge potential in ...
The Takeout on MSN
You're Risking Your Safety If You're Using Your Dish Sponge This Way
It may look innocent, but the kitchen sponge is often the nastiest thing in a kitchen, and the main reason is that people use it for the wrong things.
KIT researchers develop a chip that captures microbial dark matter in air, water, and soil – new tool for biotechnology and medicine From human intestines to the bottom of the sea: Microorganisms ...
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