Some items you might want to add ...
[1] Petri dishes for bacterial culture
[2] Microtome for slicing material for microscope slides
[3] Thermostatically controlled water bath for such things as melting biological setting wax, which you encase specimens such as whole insects in before slicing them in the microtome
[4] Low power stereo microscope with camera attachment (known in the trade as a trinocular microscope) to work with fiddly specimens
[5] Cabinets for keeping slides (these are usually the size of a bathroom first aid cabinet)
[6] Assorted laboratory glassware - beakers, conical flasks, pipettes, including glassware with measuring gradations
[7] Various bottles containing such substances as microscopy stains, fixatives, mordants, etc
[8] Various dissecting instruments - scalpels, straight and bent dissection needles (the latter are essential for entomology work), forceps, etc
[9] Bunsen burner and gas tap for when you're heating things (e.g., when using Ziehl-Neelson stains for tuberculosis and leprosy samples)
[10] Small bottles of concentrated acids for specialist processes (e.g., Ziehl-Neelson staining again)
[11] Incubator cabinet for Petri dishes and bacterial cultures
[12] Autoclave for sterilising instruments & glassware (modern ones look like microwave ovens)
[13] Someone's already mentioned a fluorescence microscope (which is a
large and heavy instrument) - you might want to consider a confocal laser microscope (again a substantial piece of kit) if you're thinking of virology work, to go with the mega expensive electron microscope and ancillaries
[14] A couple of yellow 'biohazard' marked disposal bins, including one marked "sharps" for things such as disposable hypodermics
[15] Dispenser for those translucent latex gloves used when handling pathogenic materials
[16] Someone's already mentioned a glove box (you stick your hands in the gloves and manipulate things in a negative pressure hermetically sealed environment when handling major biohazards)
If you want an elementary introduction to some of this kit, get hold of
this book. It's aimed at children, was written in the 1970s, and might seem out of date, but it's still
extremely useful as an insight into the world of the microscope and its applications. It'll introduce you to one or two of the techniques that professionals use in the laboratory even today, and act as a springboard from which you can add more kit to your virtual lab.
Additionally, go
here and look up the microscope section. The
dissection section will also be informative.
You'll find a mass of up to date equipment to browse through
here. Weep at the prices.