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Earlier this week, were announced the winners of the contest digital image Olympus BioScapes 2013. The close-ups that reached the top 10 of the competition is an impressive collection catering auctions of tiny living beings. A transparent larva to an embryo bat, these records are awesome and amazing.
The photograph depicts the legs and head of a fly larva-of-water, Sericostoma sp, a European and North American genus of insects whose larvae live in freshwater, gravel, rocks or sand. The Sericostoma builds a capsule (portable tube) of grains catering auctions of sand to protect her limp body and eats the remains of plants and small invertebrates. This is a benthic macroinvertebrado larvae which can be used for biomonitoring catering auctions of fresh water. To be relatively sensitive to organic pollution and die if the water is dirty, it is a good indicator of water quality.
Any organic matter is eligible for the contest and the photos and videos are judged based on scientific, technical and aesthetic merit. The big winner this year hit over 2000 other candidates from 62 countries. See fantastic winning microscopic images
When shooting, the paramecium shows contractile vacuole and its ciliary movement. It is an inhabitant of fresh water. Excess water is absorbed via osmosis collected in two contractile vacuoles, catering auctions one at each end, which swell and expel the water through an opening in the cell membrane. The sweeping motion of the lateral cilia help in handling the single-celled organism. 8. The tail of a rat cells
Strangely psychedelic, the image that took eighth place showing mounts stained whole rat tails to the hair follicle stem marker K15 (green) cells, and Ki67 (red), which marks proliferating cells. The nuclei are labeled with DAPI (blue).
Chaoborus, also known as "glassworm" (in free translation, "Red Glass") or phantom midge larva is the object of this image. Birefringent muscle that is normally clear and colorless becomes visible here by specialized lighting.
Technique: Polarized Light Magnification: 100x Author: Charles Krebs Issaquah, Washington Geologist makes microscopic images of common rocks and reveals a psychedelic kaleidoscope of colors 6. 'Puppies' beetles
The beautiful image shows embryonic mouse fibroblasts showing actin filaments (red) and DNA (blue). The record still further shows the interior of the mitochondria which were viewed by expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP) fused to a mitochondrial localization sequence.
Looking at the picture in warm tones is difficult to imagine that many people earn one of the boyfriend or the use of graces in the room. The fourth place in the competition went to the colorful cross-section of a flower bud lily.
Seemingly out of a dream, but a composite image shows a single-celled freshwater algae of the order Desmidiales. Beings of this order exhibit a wide range of sizes of 10 microns or smaller, and its striking symmetry is a characteristic that defines them. The red in the image comes from the native fluorescence of chlorophyll.
This is a side view of an embryo of black bat Molossus rufus in phase "hide and seek". At this time of pregnancy this mammal, the wings have grown enough to cover your eyes. With the development, the fingers grow and form more maneuverable supports its wings, supporting the webbing between toes.
Taken by Igor Siwanowicz, catering auctions the photo shows the open trap of an aquatic carnivorous plant (Utricularia gibba). The plant floats in the water waiting for their prey, touching his cocked by, makes the plant open the trap so quickly that sucks water, as well as some unlucky micro invertebrates. The beautiful floquinhos near the bottom of the image are unicellular algae that live inside the trap. The image has been magnified 100 times. [Wired]
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