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Department of Agriculture
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(DOI/USGS)
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National Science Foundation
(NSF)


The Microbe Project
"to maximize the opportunities offered by genome-enabled microbial science to benefit science and society, through coordinated interagency efforts to promote research, infrastructure development, education and outreach"

The microbial world is vast and diverse. The Earth hosts over 1030 microorganisms, representing the largest component of the planet's biomass. Microbes include bacteria, archaea, mollicutes, fungi, microalgae, viruses and protozoa---organisms with a wide range of morphologies and lifestyles. Microorganisms have colonized virtually every environment on Earth ranging from deep sea thermal vents, polar sea ice, desert rocks, guts of termites, roots of plants, to the human body. While microbes are often feared for the diseases they may cause, other microorganisms mediate the essential biogeochemical cycles of key elements that make our planet habitable.  Ancient lineages of microorganisms may hold the key to understanding the earliest history of life on Earth.

 


In The Spotlight
New Window Opens on the Secret Life of Microbes: Scientists Develop First Microbial Profiles of Ecosystems
Microbial profiles serve as the ecological version of the human genome project
Updated August 11, 2008

Bacteria "Feed" on Earth's Ocean-Bottom Crust
Rocks on and under seafloor offer feast for microbes
Updated August 11, 2008

Scientists Sequence Genome of Soil-Dwelling Green Alga
Results have implications for understanding early evolutionary events
Updated August 11, 2008


The Microbe Project is a project of the Office of Science & Technology
Policy and the National Science & Technology Council, Committee
On Science, Subcommittee on Biotechnology


For questions about the website, contact the Microbe Project Webmaster