Long read by Carrie Arnold in Environmental Health Perspectives on the Hospital Microbiome

There is an article by Carrie Arnold in the new issue of EHP (Environmental Health Perspectives) should be of interest to some people out there: EHP — Rethinking Sterile: The Hospital Microbiome. In the article, Carrie Arnold discusses Jack Gilbert’s hospital microbiome project, hospital acquired infections, DNA based surveys of microbes, and work from the …

Paper on Microbially Induced Concrete Corrosion

Back in May we posted about a Gizmodo article entitled “Concrete-Dissolving Bacteria Are Destroying Our Nation’s Sewers”.  This article highlighted Sloan-funded work by Mark Hernandez and others that describes some of the biochemistry and microbiology behind concrete corrosion in sewers.   A (fee-required) paper describing that work has just come out, with a press release focused …

Possible pathogens in rainwater harvesting tanks

Just came across this article entitled “Rainwater harvesting tanks enable spread of dangerous pathogens, study shows”.  The article describes a fairly straightforward set of findings from rainwater storage tanks in South Africa.  Researchers found Legionella, Klebsiella, Giardia, Salmonella, and Yersinia.  Not a friendly-sounding list of bugs. However, I have the usual set of issues with …

Article on the “Facility for Low Energy Experiments (FLEXLab)”

With a URL asking “is this the most important building in the country?”, I had to check this one out.  This article from SmartPlanet describe the “Facility for Low Energy Experiments (FLEXLab)”, housed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in CA. Basically it’s a fancy building that allows designers, architects, builders and others to test various …

The Economist suggests high-tech indoor farms are the future; the microbes are skeptical

Well I for one am not convinced about the high tech indoor farms being the future of “market gardening”: High-tech farming: The light fantastic | The Economist.  Sure, being able to control conditions has many uses.  And those pesky seasons and the outdoor world in general is pretty annoying right?  This article in the Economist ends …