@[email protected]M to Science [email protected]English • 2 months agoson, happy birthdaymander.xyzimagemessage-square18fedilinkarrow-up1611
arrow-up1611imageson, happy birthdaymander.xyz@[email protected]M to Science [email protected]English • 2 months agomessage-square18fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish14•2 months agoI’m not a biologist but there is no way in hell that a virus can be as big as a living organism right? That’s probably not a bacteriophage
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish12•2 months agoDefinitely not, a bacteriophage is like 500 nanometres. A tardigrade is 0.5 mm, or 500 000 nanometres, literally 1000x the size.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish11•edit-22 months agoI am a microbiologist, there’s no way in hell that’s a virus. Edit: it’s probably a radiolarian skeleton, maybe genus cornutella. Edit 2: it’s indeed a cornutella skeleton: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/12782032
I’m not a biologist but there is no way in hell that a virus can be as big as a living organism right? That’s probably not a bacteriophage
Definitely not, a bacteriophage is like 500 nanometres. A tardigrade is 0.5 mm, or 500 000 nanometres, literally 1000x the size.
I am a microbiologist, there’s no way in hell that’s a virus.
Edit: it’s probably a radiolarian skeleton, maybe genus cornutella.
Edit 2: it’s indeed a cornutella skeleton: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/12782032
Came here to say this…