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136 results filtered with: Macroscopic Solutions
  • Human dermis scar tissue
  • Eyelash root
  • Mosquito (unknown species)
  • Louse (Pediculus humanus humanus)
  • House fly (Musca domestica)
  • Human mustache hair
  • Human eye with blue iris
  • Tick
  • Blue Weevil, Close-up
  • Stingray (Batoidea) tooth
  • Mouse embryo
  • Tick
  • Tip of a human tongue
  • Insect Molt/Moult
  • Brown marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys)
  • Broccoli floret
  • Spore tubes on mushroom (unknown species)
  • Emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire) beetle
  • Ginkgo leaf
  • Contact lens
  • Madagascan sunset moth (Chrysiridia rhipheus) scales.
  • Agapostemon, anterior view
  • Trachymyrmex septentrionalis is the northernmost fungus growing ant, and is abundant in pine flat forests throughout the Eastern USA, ranging as far north as Long Island, New York. In this symbiosis, T. septentrionalis ants collect plant material and insect feces, which they feed to a specific "cultivar" fungus that they farm in underground gardens. Once the fungus has digested this food, it forms nutrient-rich swellings that the ants feed upon. The ants also protect their cultivar fungus from disease using antibiotic-producing Pseudonocardia bacteria that reside on the ants' proplueral plates (i.e., "chest"). The ants therefore both farm the cultivar fungus as their food source and protect it by "crop spraying" antibiotics produced by their symbiotic Pseudonocardia bacteria.
  • Banana Stem Cross Section
  • Horsefly (unknown species)
  • Shark intestine with tapeworm
  • Dragonfly, wing
  • Chicken knee cartilage
  • Leafhopper, lateral
  • Silverfish (Lepisma saccharina)