A couple of months ago, I received an interesting package in the mail. It looked like a standard
manila envelope, but inside was a device that could quite possibly
revolutionize the way we view the microscopic world. I'm referring to the Foldscope, an origami-based
optical microscope that is small enough to fit inside your pocket. The real
kicker: the entire cost of the instrument is less than one dollar.
The Foldscope has received some recent and well-deserved media attention (the lab's publication on
this device recently made it in the top 20 papers in PLOS One for 2014) but I hadn't
seen many videos on the Foldscope being put to the test in the field. It
seemed like there was a lot of potential for this invention, but I wondered how
it would fare on one of my expeditions through a jungle searching for unknown
species. So I decided to assemble my miniature paper microscopes and travel to
one of the most remote places in the world, the rainforest of the Peruvian Amazon, to give
them a go.
The Results
Long story short,
this device is amazing. During my time in the Amazon rainforest, I was able to
investigate tiny insects, mites, fungi and plant cells from 140x to 480x
magnification without requiring a large and expensive conventional microscope.
Some of the diverse arthropod specimens could
potentially be new to science, so it was really exciting to document images and
videos of these organisms right there in the field by connecting my phone to
the Foldscope.
Top left, a leaf is covered in galls. Top right, a cross-section of a
gall; notice the tiny insect larva living inside! Bottom, the larva was placed
under the Foldscope and viewed on my cell phone. Pictures and videos were
recorded in real-time out in the Amazon rainforest
Suspecting that the galls were formed by some
sort of wasp or fly, I later got in touch with a couple of Diptera (fly)
experts, Morgan Jackson (@BioInFocus)
and Dr. Stephen Gaimari, who helped identify the gall forming culprits as a
possible species of fly belonging to the family Cecidomyiidae.
A spider infected by a parasitic fungus known as Cordyceps. The circles show regions of the fungus viewed under the Foldscope. |
Final Thoughts
The research team, led by
Dr. Manu Prakash, seeks to "democratize science" by developing tools
that are able to scale up to match problems in global health and science
education -- and I believe they are doing just that with the Foldscope. This
device is cheap, easy to use and broadly applicable whether you're a curious
young student, a medical professional in the field or someone who is interested
in the numerous tiny things that surround us. Until now, I've never had a
device that made viewing and sharing the microcosmos so accessible.
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