Top products from r/microbiology

We found 23 product mentions on r/microbiology. We ranked the 40 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/microbiology:

u/fairpear · 3 pointsr/microbiology

What kind of books do you like? Something with a narrative or something that's more like a text book? Something that fits in between is a short read called " Microcosm: E.coli and the New Science of Life

My favorite book is "The Hot Zone" though. It's more of a page-turner, but some information in it is dramatized and it's more about the story than the organism. It depends what you're looking for. Another good book is "Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic" It's a bit of a slower read, but it's a good read that focuses more on diseases while having good stories

u/Plague_Girl · 1 pointr/microbiology

I agree with people below that you could have been more specific in your question, but for a good overview of the skin and gut microbiomes --how they are formed, what their function is, and the history of researching them-- I would check out Good Germs, Bad Germs. To be honest, it's rather dry to read through, but it's great to skim.

You might have already found this, but NPR has a whole series of articles on the microbiome, which might be useful more to find scientific journal articles you can get specific info from than to read by themselves.

u/Msmariet · 3 pointsr/microbiology

Im not sure this is exactly what you're looking for but I have this page to a book called "Coloring with Cell" (link) which has a page about mitosis (its more centered aroud eukaryotic cells so I dont know if that will help you). If you need some stuff on prokaryotic cells I suggest the microbiology coloring book (amazon link) but this is not geared towards those age groups. Lastly i've found that that for children to get a basic idea youtube videos seem to get them interested, I suggest crash course biology and maybe you will find a video that could work for them.

Best of luck!

u/SillyEbily · 1 pointr/microbiology

Yes, it is hard to get experience here in the UK as a student. It does bode well to ask for tours around labs if you can though and I think one of my friends did volunteer at our University over the summer between her second/third year.
Please do learn your aseptic technique and also remember the importance of lab health and safety too :D A very good book for microbiology laboratory techniques and the methods used to analyse various specimens is; Medical Microbiology (Fundamentals of Biomedical Science) editied by Michael Ford. Here is the link on the UK Amazon http://www.amazon.co.uk/Medical-Microbiology-Fundamentals-Biomedical-Science/dp/019954963X .
I have just finished an undergraduate masters in Biomedical Science and did my training in microbiology (1 year in industry) and just got a job in a microbiology lab and this book helped me understand the tests the labs used, very useful.
Two things for when writing assignments/essays:

  1. Remember to put all organism names in italics
  2. Remember the Gram of Gram stain always should have a capital G
    Sorry if that comes across as obvious or anything, its just two things my lecturer always hated, moaned and dropped us marks for :D
u/bluecoop36 · 2 pointsr/microbiology

http://www.amazon.com/Guide-Microlife-Science-Life-Environmental/dp/0531112667/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1453749068&sr=8-1&keywords=guide+to+microlife
I wasn't sure if linking this from Amazon is okay. I'm still fairly new to Reddit. This is actually a high school textbook, but seems like a good place to start as it covers a broad range. What magnification are you on in the picture. We generally scan on 10x and read slides on 40x. At 40x, it's about the size you show. The ocular micrometer is hugely helpful for this stuff. But I could be wrong. I live in an area where we hardly saw anything interesting, so it's hard to learn. We finally opted to send samples to our reference lab once our 'expert' retired.

u/PsiWavefunction · 3 pointsr/microbiology

A field guide to bacteria

For protists... well, there's Free-living Freshwater Protozoa by Patterson, but it's quite expensive. I have just found Part I online though, that someone scanned. Here's part 2 It's an excellent resource for pond critters.

And there's always google. Lots of googling... ;-)

u/joystickrequired · 3 pointsr/microbiology

Welcome! TWiM is excellent.

For basic textbooks, I would suggest Microbe 2nd ed (TWiM's Michele Swanson is lead author; ASM link, Amazon link) or Brock's Biology of Microorganisms (Amazon link).

Please let me know if you have more questions!

Full disclosure: I work for ASM, but I would recommend Microbe 2nd ed even if I didn't.

u/Reedms · 2 pointsr/microbiology

Some suggestions are below. They aren't "field guides" but are still some good choices. I admit I haven't finished March of the Microbes or Missing Microbes but Microbes and Evolution is a fantastic collection of essays.

March of the Microbes

Microbes and Evolution: The World Darwin Never Saw

Missing Microbes: How the Overuse of Antibiotics is Fueling Our Modern Plagues

u/[deleted] · 3 pointsr/microbiology

Level 4: Virus Hunters of the CDC by Joseph McCormick and Susan Fisher-Hoch is a good read - definitely non-fiction. They were there for the first Ebola outbreaks in the 70's and the Hanta outbreaks in NM later on.

McCormick is a great guy. I tracked him down and emailed him when I was an undergrad, and I asked him how I could get in to the field. He responded back with an incredibly detailed email and couldn't have been nicer.

u/CatalystNZ · 2 pointsr/microbiology

Without a doubt, that's the Illustration work of David S. Goodsell

http://mgl.scripps.edu/people/goodsell/

His Book, The Machinary of Life, is Amazing

u/skeletor_999 · 1 pointr/microbiology

Here are a bunch microbiology essays that I really enjoyed:

Microbes and Evolution: The World That Darwin Never Saw
http://www.amazon.ca/Microbes-Evolution-World-Darwin-Never/dp/1555815405

u/BadScienceGuy · 1 pointr/microbiology

The Hot Zone is also another good read.
It's about an outbreak on US soil.

u/Saience · 2 pointsr/microbiology

I think my first one was this: http://www.amazon.com/General-Microbiology-Hans-G-Schlegel/dp/052143372X/ (I hope this is the correct one, mine was the German version).

u/15blinks · 3 pointsr/microbiology

(Rabid)[http://www.amazon.com/Rabid-Cultural-History-Worlds-Diabolical/dp/0670023736/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1342794228&sr=8-1&keywords=rabid] is all the rage right now. It's about rabies and has lots of gory details on how the virus works, as well as its role in history.