Microbiologist Answers Microbiology Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED

Microbiologist Dan Buckley joins WIRED to answer the internet’s burning questions about microbiology. What’s the fastest known bacteria? Is the zombie fungi from “The Last Of Us” realistic? Why is cat poop is dangerous for pregnant people? How did metal-eating bacteria come about? How does horizontal gene transfer work? What microbes should we be most concerned about? Dan Buckley answers these questions and many more await on WIRED Microbiology Support.

Director: Lisandro Perez-Rey
Director of Photography: Kevin Dynia
Editor: Richard Trammell
Expert: Dan Buckley
Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
Associate Producer: Paul Gulyas; Brandon White
Production Manager: Peter Brunette
Production Coordinator: Rhyan Lark
Casting Producer: Nicholas Sawyer
Camera Operator: Christopher Eusteche
Sound Mixer: Gabe Quiroga
Production Assistant: Cerina Shippey
Post Production Supervisor: Christian Olguin
Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
Additional Editor: Jason Malizia
Assistant Editor: Billy Ward

0:00 Microbiology Support
0:13 Brain-eating amoebas?
0:59 Flatulence and gut health
2:27 The Dancing Pinhead Microbes
2:46 Are we human or are we microbe?
3:27 The fastest bacteria
4:15 Predatory bacteria
5:17 Bacteria on the move
6:31 The Last Of Us fungi: Real or No
7:26 The microbe that scares this expert the most
8:18 Metal eating bacteria
9:23 Antibiotic-resistant bacteria
10:55 Microwaves and bacteria
11:59 Extremophiles
12:58 Bacteria vs. Virus vs. Fungus
13:50 Magnet bacteria, how do they work?
14:57 Subway poles and you: Partners in cleanliness
16:30 We Love Tardigrades
17:03 Why cat poop is dangerous for pregnant people
18:01 [Romantic Music playing]
18:28 Horizontal gene transfer
19:29 The biggest bacteria
19:54 Gut creature cravings
20:48 Fecal transplants, sure
21:56 What is it that you do here
22:41 Martian microbes
23:42 Phone screens vs toilets
24:35 Beneficial microbes
25:33 …knowing what they know
26:20 Unanswered questions about microbes
27:23 Do bacteria mostly smell the same?

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20 thoughts on “Microbiologist Answers Microbiology Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED

  1. Oblate Spheroid is the most accurate term for the shape of Earth. The planet gets wider as you move closer to the equator because physics.

  2. My son has a Trachi he colonises pseudomonas in his lungs but it’s maintained with antibiotic nebs daily

  3. I am watching (or hearing) this on background mode as I did with most of the videos. This guy really sounds like Hank.

  4. I know someone who has chickens and never feeds them a purchased chicken feed. their chickens are not sick and their rooster crows every morning at 530 am like clockwork.

  5. 0:45
    “its is not DESIGNED to eat your brain”…?
    so its visible for scientists that systems are designed by a designer, interesting.

  6. Brain amoeba also are in California lakes of course. Birds spread it. So your Bird bath in yard and all puddles have them
    – parasitologist zoologist ethologist Oxford PhD. On brain parasites

  7. (Subway pole) They found hippo bacteria on a zoology scan of new york a few years ago on the hand rail. Several sub saharan bacteria of strange animals.

  8. ( cat litter parasite) Toxoplasmosiaisis in pregnancy causes faux autism and hydrocephalus, not just miscarriage.
    My son has it. I worked in a vet clinic before i found out i was pregnant.

  9. 12:03 really channeled your inner Christopher Walken on that “Thrive”

    Listen Mac, I’m going to… teach you… about… microbiology. Yes… Little thing… Very small… Tiny… You can’t even see them… but they are there… Oh, they are there… Watching you… In your… insides. Yes

  10. How many types of ‘magnetic microbes are there? Where are they most common?
    And would they all change directions is the magnetic fields of earth flipped? I was considering the eventual signs of that shift biologically.

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