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Alternaria spore was zoom by transmission electron microscope. Alternaria is a genus of ascomycete fungi. Alternaria species are known as major plant pathogens.
Photomicrograph of rotifer, probably Rotaria rotatoria. Rapidly rotating cilia at top of head, internal organs visible. Green circles are algae. Live specimen. Original image at 40X, wet mount, transmitted brightfield illumination. Indistinct image due to motion blur of live specimen and very shallow depth of field of brightfield illumination.
The nematode Steinernema feltiae under the microscope, the species used as a biopesticide to infect fungus gnats in agriculture and gardening.
Aspergillus fumigatus is one of the most common Aspergillus species to cause disease in individuals with an immunodeficiency. This pathogen primarily causes invasive infection in the lung.
KOH slide preparation of the nail scraping microscopic showed long septated hyphae and numerous arthrospores.
aspergillus under microscopy
Freshwater aquatic zooplankton and algae under microscope view
Trematode parasite under a microscope
Characteristics of Rhizopus is a genus of common saprophytic fungi  on Slide under the microscope for education.
Cheyletiella blakei Mite - Small Cat pest view under a microscope
Scabes mites eggs, Notoedres cati, from skin sample, microscopic view. Feline scabiosis.
Aspergillus fumigatus is one of the most common Aspergillus species to cause disease in individuals with an immunodeficiency. This pathogen primarily causes invasive infection in the lung.
Microscopic image showing oxalate crystals from urine sediment, most common cause of kidney stones
plant Zea Stem C.S. under light mircoscope with white background
Noctiluca scintillans algae cells algae under microscopic view, bioluminescent, bright blue glow on water at night, responsible for environmental hazards, toxic red tides and eutrophication
Photomicrograph of Euglena species. Fresh water, California. Live specimen. Wet mount, 40X objective, transmitted bright field illumination.
Host cells with spores (mold) are inside wood under the microscope for education.
Squash preparation of  onion root tip cells stained to reveal chromosomes,  Bright field illumination, light microscopy.  This image was taken with the X40 objective lens.  Depth of focus is extremely low at this magnification.  Smaller apertures give greater depth of focus, but image quality deteriorates and resolution is greatly reduced.  The aperture in this image was optimised for contrast and resolution. Chromatic abberation is inevitable in light microscopy, but has been kept to a minimum in this image.
Notoedres cati under the microscope. Notoedric mange, also referred to as Feline scabies, is a highly contagious skin infestation caused by an ectoparasitic and skin burrowing mite Notoedres cati.
Yellow Star Tulip, Calochortus monophyllus, Pine Grove, California.
Demodex folliculorum - parasitic mite on the eyelashes of a human eye, microscope
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Diatoms, algae under microscopic view, phytoplankton, fossils, silica, golden yellow algae
Tiny, low, prostrate, hairy annual. Leaflets 7-13 pairs, elliptical to oblong. Flowers with or pink, 3-5mm, in heads of 3-8; bracts with 5-9 leaflets, longer than the flowers. Pods 10-18mm, with a hooked beak and 4-9 segments, in clusters resembling a birth’s foot.\nHabitat: Open patches in short turf, waste and arable ground; generally on rather dry, acid, sandy or gravelly soils.\nFlowering Season: May-August.\nDistribution: North to S Sweden, not Norway, west to Russia.\n\nThis is a quite common Species in the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
Synedra ulna (unicellular freshwater diatom algae) under the microscope - optical microscope x400 magnification
Diatom or yellow-green alga. Each diatom is composed of one cell and is mobile. San Francisco Bay, California, USA. Live specimen. Wet mount, 40X objective, transmitted brightfield illumination. Note - motion blur of live specimen, very shallow depth of field, chromatic aberration and uneven focus are inherent in light microscopy.
The Microscopic World. Tap water.
Photomicrograph of an ascus with eight ascospores. This preparation was stained with acid fuchsin, which stains the cytoplasm of the ascospores a deep red color. The fungus is an ascomycete, Diplodia corticola, that infects the wood of oak trees, and is one of the causes of oak decline disease.The picture was taken with a microscope equipped with differential interference contrast optical system that gives a three dimensional effect.
the texture of the surface of the microscope
Microscopic image of blood
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