Science Researcher Update

Microbes in the City: Mapping the Urban Genome

Written by Stela BCI | May 6, 2015 1:38:00 PM
 
Conference - New York, United States
 
Microbes run the world. The human body and our environment are inhabited by trillions of bacteria and other microbes that carry out the majority of the biochemical activity on the planet. From birth, all of our interactions with the world expose us to different sources of microbes, and, conversely, expose microbes to us.
As humans settle into built environments within urban settings, microorganisms both within and around us are changing accordingly. Yet we still understand very little about the complex, interdependent microbial ecosystems found in the built environment. By virtue of recent technological breakthroughs in sensing, sampling, and genetic sequencing of the microbes in our midst, we can quantify and map microbial transmission between humans, urban pests such as cockroaches and pigeons, and the air and surfaces of urban habitats — from kiosks and subways, to soil and sewage.
This conference will bring together scientists, engineers, architects, public health workers, ethicists, and policy makers at the forefront of efforts to map all of the genetic information that makes up the urban genome.
Organization: New York Academy of Sciences
Microbes in the City: Mapping the Urban Genome
 
Friday, June 19, 2015 (8:00 AM - 7:00 PM)
The New York Academy of Sciences
250 Greenwich Street, 40th floor, New York, United States
 
If you'd like to ask a question or post a comment about this talk please do so below.
This seminar posting is brought to you by Biotechnology Calendar, Inc. providing access to research information and research tools for nearly 20 years. Visit our Science Market Update Blog for current science funding and market information or see our schedule of upcoming science research laboratory product shows.