We are moving!
The main server of MiGA Online will be relocating to: aau.microbial-genomes.org
The data here will remain available for about a month, so please download any files you might need. For any future submissions, please use the new server instead.
In order to protect data privacy, no data will be transferred to the new servers, which means you will have to register again as a user.
About MiGA Web
Web interface for MiGA,
the Microbial Genomes Atlas
Citation
If you use MiGA in your research, please cite:
Rodriguez-R et al (2018). The Microbial Genomes Atlas (MiGA) webserver: taxonomic and gene diversity analysis of Archaea and Bacteria at the whole genome level. Nucleic Acids Research 46(W1):W282-W288. doi:10.1093/nar/gky467.
Rodriguez-R et al (2020). Classifying prokaryotic genomes using the Microbial Genomes Atlas (MiGA) webserver. Bergey's Manual of Systematics of Archaea and Bacteria.
Behind MiGA
MiGA web is developed and maintained by Luis M. Rodriguez-R. The MiGA web codebase is freely available under the terms of the terms of the Artistic License 2.0.
MiGA is the result of a collaboration between the Kostas Lab (Georgia Institute of Technology), the RDP team (Center for Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University), and the Rodriguez-R lab (University of Innsbruck).
The MiGA project is funded by the US National Science Foundation (Award #1356288, and Award #MCB190042).
Getting MiGA Web
If you want to host your own MiGA web server for your dedicated projects, please visit the GitHub repository and the MiGA manual.