All Stories

  1. Launching the IUCN Microbial Conservation Specialist Group as a global safeguard for microbial biodiversity
  2. Sustainable Agriculture in a Changing Climate: Unlocking Climate-Smart Agriculture for Securing Global Food Systems
  3. Bioremediation of heavy metal(loid)s in agricultural soils and crops
  4. Plant pathogens, microbiomes, and soil health
  5. Massive overlap of soil-borne fungal pathogens and developed countries
  6. Vulnerability of soil food webs to chemical pollution and climate change
  7. Drought-induced plant microbiome and metabolic enrichments improve drought resistance
  8. Microbiome-facilitated plant nutrient acquisition
  9. A Large Fraction of Soil Microbial Taxa Is Sensitive to Experimental Warming
  10. Integrating ecological and evolutionary frameworks for SynCom success
  11. Unravelling Changes in the Pinus radiata Root and Soil Microbiomes as a Function of Aridity
  12. Harnessing Bacterial Potential to Reduce Nitrous Oxide Emissions From Agricultural Soils
  13. Soil Multitrophic Interactions in a Changing World
  14. Environmental microbiome, human fungal pathogens, and antimicrobial resistance
  15. Soil function-microbial diversity relationship is impacted by plant functional groups under climate change
  16. Integrating ecological and evolutionary frameworks for SynCom success
  17. Prophage-encoded antibiotic resistance genes are enriched in human-impacted environments
  18. Formulation challenges associated with microbial biofertilizers in sustainable agriculture and paths forward
  19. Partner or perish: tree microbiomes and climate change
  20. Linking biodiversity and biotic interactions to ecosystem functioning
  21. Plant species and associated root nutritional traits influence soil dominant bacteria in coastal wetlands across China
  22. Aboveground and belowground biodiversity have complementary effects on ecosystem functions across global grasslands
  23. Harnessing co-evolutionary interactions between plants and Streptomyces to combat drought stress
  24. The abundant fraction of soil microbiomes regulates the rhizosphere function in crop wild progenitors
  25. Microbial species pool-mediated diazotrophic community assembly in crop microbiomes during plant development
  26. Soil microbial diversity plays an important role in resisting and restoring degraded ecosystems
  27. Dryland microbiomes reveal community adaptations to desertification and climate change
  28. Soil Depth-Dependent Impacts of Agricultural Land Use on the Linkages between Soil Microbial Communities and Agroecosystem Functioning
  29. Green manure substitution for potassium fertilizer promotes agro-ecosystem multifunctionality via triggering interactions among soil, plant and rhizosphere microbiome
  30. Assessing critical thresholds in terrestrial microbiomes
  31. Vegetation type, not the legacy of warming, modifies the response of microbial functional genes and greenhouse gas fluxes to drought in Oro-Arctic and alpine regions
  32. Evidence of distinct response of soil viral community to a plant infection and the disease pathobiome
  33. Plants and endophytes interaction: a “secret wedlock” for sustainable biosynthesis of pharmaceutically important secondary metabolites
  34. Severe Prolonged Drought Favours Stress-Tolerant Microbes in Australian Drylands
  35. Microbiome Interconnectedness throughout Environments with Major Consequences for Healthy People and a Healthy Planet
  36. Litter and soil biodiversity jointly drive ecosystem functions
  37. New microbial tools to boost restoration and soil organic matter
  38. Tapping the rhizosphere metabolites for the prebiotic control of soil-borne bacterial wilt disease
  39. Seed biopriming for sustainable agriculture and ecosystem restoration
  40. Effects of biostimulant application on soil biological and physicochemical properties: A field study
  41. Symbiotic status alters fungal eco‐evolutionary offspring trajectories
  42. Fixation of CO2 by soil fungi: contribution to organic carbon pool and destination of fixed carbon products
  43. Soil microbiomes must be explicitly included in One Health policy
  44. Host selection has a stronger impact on leaf microbiome assembly compared to land‐management practices
  45. Climate change impacts on plant pathogens, food security and paths forward
  46. Biocontrol of plant pathogens in omics era—with special focus on endophytic bacilli
  47. Crop microbiome responses to pathogen colonisation regulate the host plant defence
  48. Crop microbiome responses to pathogen colonisation regulate the host plant defence
  49. Complementary effects of above- and belowground biodiversity on ecosystem functions across global grasslands
  50. Individuality and stability of the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) faecal microbiota through time
  51. Warmer and drier ecosystems select for smaller bacterial genomes in global soils
  52. Agricultural Soil Degradation in Australia
  53. Biotic and Abiotic Responses to Soilborne Pathogens and Environmental Predictors of Soil Health
  54. Dynamics of Rhizosphere Microbial Structure and Function Associated with the Biennial Bearing of Moso Bamboo
  55. Food systems transformation requires science–policy–society interfaces that integrate existing global networks and new knowledge hubs
  56. UV index and climate seasonality explain fungal community turnover in global drylands
  57. Grazing and ecosystem service delivery in global drylands
  58. Tolerance and adaptation mechanism of Solanaceous crops under salinity stress
  59. Global hotspots for soil nature conservation
  60. Next generation tools for crop‐microbiome manipulation to mitigate the impact of climate change
  61. Response of the plant core microbiome to Fusarium oxysporum infection and identification of the pathobiome
  62. Application of microbial inoculants significantly  enhances crop productivity: A meta‐analysis of studies from 2010 to 2020
  63. Potential of microbiome-based solutions for agrifood systems
  64. Post-Harvest Losses in Potatoes from Farm to Fork
  65. Ecological clusters of soil taxa within bipartite networks are highly sensitive to climatic conditions in global drylands
  66. Microbiology in India: status, challenges and scope
  67. Synthetic community improves crop performance and alters rhizosphere microbial communities
  68. Water deficit affects inter‐kingdom microbial connections in plant rhizosphere
  69. Response of the plant core microbiome toFusarium oxysporuminfection and identification of the pathobiome
  70. Plant diversity improves resistance of plant biomass and soil microbial communities to drought
  71. The assessment of microbial ecology: a special emphasis on the Indian scenario
  72. Humidity and low pH boost occurrence of Onygenales fungi in soil at global scale
  73. Fungi drive soil multifunctionality in the coastal salt marsh ecosystem
  74. The poly‐extreme tolerant black yeasts are prevalent under high ultraviolet light and climatic seasonality across soils of global biomes
  75. Environmental thresholds in the functional mycobiome of global drylands
  76. Rocks support a distinctive and consistent mycobiome across contrasting dry regions of Earth
  77. Plant–microbiome interactions under a changing world: responses, consequences and perspectives
  78. Effects of vegetation on soil cyanobacterial communities through time and space
  79. Temperature thresholds drive the global distribution of soil fungal decomposers
  80. Effective colonisation by a bacterial synthetic community promotes plant growth and alters soil microbial community
  81. Publisher Correction: Enhancing science–policy interfaces for food systems transformation
  82. Enhancing science–policy interfaces for food systems transformation
  83. Chemical pollution: A growing peril and potential catastrophic risk to humanity
  84. Soil initial bacterial diversity and nutrient availability determine the rate of xenobiotic biodegradation
  85. Key microorganisms mediate soil carbon-climate feedbacks in forest ecosystems
  86. Vegetation structure determines cyanobacterial communities during soil development across global biomes
  87. Plant developmental stage drives the differentiation in ecological role of the maize microbiome
  88. The hidden treasures of citrus: finding Huanglongbing cure where it was lost
  89. Generalist Taxa Shape Fungal Community Structure in Cropping Ecosystems
  90. Global homogenization of the structure and function in the soil microbiome of urban greenspaces
  91. Gut microbial diversity in stingless bees is linked to host wing size and is influenced by geography
  92. Shifts on archaeal community structure in pure and mixed Eucalyptus grandis and Acacia mangium plantations
  93. Phytomicrobiome for promoting sustainable agriculture and food security: Opportunities, challenges, and solutions
  94. Rainfall frequency and soil water availability regulate soil methane and nitrous oxide fluxes from a native forest exposed to elevated carbon dioxide
  95. Realities and hopes in the application of microbial tools in agriculture
  96. Global diversity and ecological drivers of lichenised soil fungi
  97. All together now: Limitations and recommendations for the simultaneous analysis of all eukaryotic soil sequences
  98. Integrative effects of increasing aridity and biotic cover on soil attributes and functioning in coastal dune ecosystems
  99. Experimental evidence of strong relationships between soil microbial communities and plant germination
  100. Development of Microbiome Biobanks – Challenges and Opportunities
  101. Nitrogen-fixing trees in mixed forest systems regulate the ecology of fungal community and phosphorus cycling
  102. Validation of molecular response of tuberization in response to elevated temperature by using a transient Virus Induced Gene Silencing (VIGS) in potato
  103. Functional rarity and evenness are key facets of biodiversity to boost multifunctionality
  104. Plant productivity is a key driver of soil respiration response to climate change in a nutrient-limited soil.
  105. The response of soil multi-functionality to agricultural management practices can be predicted by key soil abiotic and biotic properties
  106. Ecosystem properties in urban areas vary with habitat type and settlement age
  107. Microbiome innovations for a sustainable future
  108. Tracking, targeting, and conserving soil biodiversity
  109. Soil Biogeochemical Cycle Couplings Inferred from a Function-Taxon Network
  110. Evidence for the plant recruitment of beneficial microbes to suppress soil‐borne pathogens
  111. Author Correction: Plant–microbiome interactions: from community assembly to plant health
  112. Author Correction: Crop microbiome and sustainable agriculture
  113. NosZ clade II rather than clade I determine in situ N2O emissions with different fertilizer types under simulated climate change and its legacy
  114. Rare taxa maintain the stability of crop mycobiomes and ecosystem functions
  115. Crop microbiome and sustainable agriculture
  116. Host selection shapes crop microbiome assembly and network complexity
  117. Contrasting environmental preferences of photosynthetic and non‐photosynthetic soil cyanobacteria across the globe
  118. Linking the Phyllosphere Microbiome to Plant Health
  119. The DOE E3SM v1.1 Biogeochemistry Configuration: Description and Simulated Ecosystem‐Climate Responses to Historical Changes in Forcing
  120. Correction to: Microbiome definition re-visited: old concepts and new challenges
  121. Plant–microbiome interactions: from community assembly to plant health
  122. Blind spots in global soil biodiversity and ecosystem function research
  123. Conversion to agroforestry and monoculture plantation is detrimental to the soil carbon and nitrogen cycles and microbial communities of a rainforest
  124. Harnessing chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) seed endophytes for enhancing plant growth attributes and bio-controlling against Fusarium sp.
  125. Microbiome-Mediated Stress Resistance in Plants
  126. Development of Microbiome Biobanks – Challenges and Opportunities
  127. Evidence for the plant recruitment of beneficial microbes to suppress soil-borne pathogen
  128. Plant Microbiomes: Do Different Preservation Approaches and Primer Sets Alter Our Capacity to Assess Microbial Diversity and Community Composition?
  129. Microbiome definition re-visited: old concepts and new challenges
  130. Climate and soil micro‐organisms drive soil phosphorus fractions in coastal dune systems
  131. Visualizing the invisible: class excursions to ignite children’s enthusiasm for microbes
  132. The proportion of soil-borne pathogens increases with warming at the global scale
  133. The fate of carbon in a mature forest under carbon dioxide enrichment
  134. Biocrusts Modulate Responses of Nitrous Oxide and Methane Soil Fluxes to Simulated Climate Change in a Mediterranean Dryland
  135. Multiple elements of soil biodiversity drive ecosystem functions across biomes
  136. Eco‐holobiont: A new concept to identify drivers of host‐associated microorganisms
  137. Increases in aridity lead to drastic shifts in the assembly of dryland complex microbial networks
  138. An Ecological Loop: Host Microbiomes across Multitrophic Interactions
  139. Tillage history and crop residue input enhanced native carbon mineralisation and nutrient supply in contrasting soils under long-term farming systems
  140. Grazing Regulates the Spatial Heterogeneity of Soil Microbial Communities Within Ecological Networks
  141. Linking microbial diversity with ecosystem functioning through a trait framework
  142. Blind spots in global soil biodiversity and ecosystem function research
  143. Fungal richness contributes to multifunctionality in boreal forest soil
  144. Transfer of antibiotic resistance from manure-amended soils to vegetable microbiomes
  145. Effect of crop residue addition on soil organic carbon priming as influenced by temperature and soil properties
  146. Losses in microbial functional diversity reduce the rate of key soil processes
  147. The fate of carbon in a mature forest under carbon dioxide enrichment
  148. Effects of elevated temperature and elevated CO2 on soil nitrification and ammonia-oxidizing microbial communities in field-grown crop
  149. Plant-driven niche differentiation of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and archaea in global drylands
  150. Scientists’ warning to humanity: microorganisms and climate change
  151. A few Ascomycota taxa dominate soil fungal communities worldwide
  152. Climate change microbiology — problems and perspectives
  153. Global drivers of methane oxidation and denitrifying gene distribution in drylands
  154. Soil amendments with ethylene precursor alleviate negative impacts of salinity on soil microbial properties and productivity
  155. The urgent need for microbiology literacy in society
  156. The Koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) faecal microbiome differs with diet in a wild population
  157. New frontiers in agriculture productivity: Optimised microbial inoculants and in situ microbiome engineering
  158. Mixed Eucalyptus plantations induce changes in microbial communities and increase biological functions in the soil and litter layers
  159. Nitrogen inputs are more important than denitrifier abundances in controlling denitrification-derived N2O emission from both urban and agricultural soils
  160. Ecological niche differentiation in soil cyanobacterial communities across the globe
  161. Relative importance of urban and non-urban land-use types for potential denitrification derived N2O: insights from a regional study
  162. Ant colonies promote the diversity of soil microbial communities
  163. Anaerobic ammonium oxidation in agricultural soils-synthesis and prospective
  164. Biotechnology for Nutritional and Associated Processing Quality Improvement in Potato
  165. Environmental drivers of the geographical distribution of methanotrophs: Insights from a national survey
  166. Cascading effects from plants to soil microorganisms explain how plant species richness and simulated climate change affect soil multifunctionality
  167. Using plant, microbe, and soil fauna traits to improve the predictive power of biogeochemical models
  168. Yellow Canopy Syndrome in sugarcane is associated with shifts in the rhizosphere soil metagenome but not with overall soil microbial function
  169. Flooding and prolonged drought have differential legacy impacts on soil nitrogen cycling, microbial communities and plant productivity
  170. Experimentally testing the species-habitat size relationship on soil bacteria: A proof of concept
  171. Identity of plant, lichen and moss species connects with microbial abundance and soil functioning in maritime Antarctica
  172. Three years of soil respiration in a mature eucalypt woodland exposed to atmospheric CO2 enrichment
  173. Diversity of herbaceous plants and bacterial communities regulates soil resistome across forest biomes
  174. Microbial mechanisms of carbon priming effects revealed during the interaction of crop residue and nutrient inputs in contrasting soils
  175. Plant attributes explain the distribution of soil microbial communities in two contrasting regions of the globe
  176. Intransitive competition is common across five major taxonomic groups and is driven by productivity, competitive rank and functional traits
  177. Biocrust-forming mosses mitigate the impact of aridity on soil microbial communities in drylands: observational evidence from three continents
  178. Impacts of waterlogging on soil nitrification and ammonia-oxidizing communities in farming system
  179. Response to comment on “Climate legacies drive global soil carbon stocks in terrestrial ecosystem”
  180. Responses of the soil microbial community to nitrogen fertilizer regimes and historical exposure to extreme weather events: Flooding or prolonged-drought
  181. Metagenomic Functional Potential Predicts Degradation Rates of a Model Organophosphorus Xenobiotic in Pesticide Contaminated Soils
  182. Ecological drivers of soil microbial diversity and soil biological networks in the Southern Hemisphere
  183. What shapes plant and animal diversity on urban golf courses?
  184. Intraspecies variation in a widely distributed tree species regulates the responses of soil microbiome to different temperature regimes
  185. A global atlas of the dominant bacteria found in soil
  186. Carbon and nutrient mineralisation dynamics in aggregate-size classes from different tillage systems after input of canola and wheat residues
  187. Field study reveals core plant microbiota and relative importance of their drivers
  188. Soil Carbon
  189. Preface
  190. Emerging microbiome technologies for sustainable increase in farm productivity and environmental security
  191. Soil Carbon Storage
  192. Climate, Geography, and Soil Abiotic Properties as Modulators of Soil Carbon Storage
  193. Impact of Global Changes on Soil C Storage—Possible Mechanisms and Modeling Approaches
  194. Microbial Modulators and Mechanisms of Soil Carbon Storage
  195. Soil Nutrients and Soil Carbon Storage
  196. Detecting macroecological patterns in bacterial communities across independent studies of global soils
  197. Soil fungal abundance and plant functional traits drive fertile island formation in global drylands
  198. Extending SEQenv: a taxa-centric approach to environmental annotations of 16S rDNA sequences
  199. Soil microbial communities drive the resistance of ecosystem multifunctionality to global change in drylands across the globe
  200. The contribution of microbial biotechnology to economic growth and employment creation
  201. Tiny Microbes, Big Yields: enhancing food crop production with biological solutions
  202. The contribution of microbial biotechnology to sustainable development goals
  203. Microbial biotechnology as a tool to restore degraded drylands
  204. Palaeoclimate explains a unique proportion of the global variation in soil bacterial communities
  205. Interactive effects of elevated CO 2 , temperature and extreme weather events on soil nitrogen and cotton productivity indicate increased variability of cotton production under future climate regimes
  206. Interactive effects of seasonal drought and elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration on prokaryotic rhizosphere communities
  207. Keystone microbial taxa regulate the invasion of a fungal pathogen in agro-ecosystems
  208. Identifying environmental drivers of greenhouse gas emissions under warming and reduced rainfall in boreal-temperate forests
  209. Microbial richness and composition independently drive soil multifunctionality
  210. Harnessing microbiome-based biotechnologies for sustainable mitigation of nitrous oxide emissions
  211. Soil aggregation and associated microbial communities modify the impact of agricultural management on carbon content
  212. Microbial nitrous oxide emissions in dryland ecosystems: mechanisms, microbiome and mitigation
  213. Circular linkages between soil biodiversity, fertility and plant productivity are limited to topsoil at the continental scale
  214. Competition drives the response of soil microbial diversity to increased grazing by vertebrate herbivores
  215. Aridity Decouples C:N:P Stoichiometry Across Multiple Trophic Levels in Terrestrial Ecosystems
  216. Advances and perspective in bioremediation of polychlorinated biphenyl-contaminated soils
  217. Isolation and Molecular Characterization of Novel Chlorpyrifos and 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol-degrading Bacteria from Sugarcane Farm Soils
  218. Climate legacies drive global soil carbon stocks in terrestrial ecosystems
  219. Identity of biocrust species and microbial communities drive the response of soil multifunctionality to simulated global change
  220. Creating new business, economic growth and regional prosperity through microbiome-based products in the agriculture industry
  221. It is elemental: soil nutrient stoichiometry drives bacterial diversity
  222. Metagenomic assembly unravel microbial response to redox fluctuation in acid sulfate soil
  223. Microbiome and the future for food and nutrient security
  224. Soil microbial communities influence seedling growth of a rare conifer independent of plant-soil feedback
  225. The Role of Microbial Community Composition in Controlling Soil Respiration Responses to Temperature
  226. Harnessing Host-Vector Microbiome for Sustainable Plant Disease Management of Phloem-Limited Bacteria
  227. Feedback responses of soil greenhouse gas emissions to climate change are modulated by soil characteristics in dryland ecosystems
  228. Conservation by translocation: establishment of Wollemi pine and associated microbial communities in novel environments
  229. Carbon content and climate variability drive global soil bacterial diversity patterns
  230. Plant-soil interactions and nutrient availability determine the impact of elevated CO2 and temperature on cotton productivity
  231. Response of Soil Properties and Microbial Communities to Agriculture: Implications for Primary Productivity and Soil Health Indicators
  232. Relative importance of soil properties and microbial community for soil functionality: insights from a microbial swap experiment
  233. Microbial regulation of the soil carbon cycle: evidence from gene–enzyme relationships
  234. Lack of functional redundancy in the relationship between microbial diversity and ecosystem functioning
  235. Species identity of biocrust-forming lichens drives the response of soil nitrogen cycle to altered precipitation frequency and nitrogen amendment
  236. Microsite Differentiation Drives the Abundance of Soil Ammonia Oxidizing Bacteria along Aridity Gradients
  237. Impact of forest management practices on soil bacterial diversity and consequences for soil processes
  238. Microbial diversity drives multifunctionality in terrestrial ecosystems
  239. Shifts in microbial communities do not explain the response of grassland ecosystem function to plant functional composition and rainfall change
  240. Corrigendum to “Water availability and abundance of microbial groups are key determinants of greenhouse gas fluxes in a dryland forest ecosystem” [Soil Biol. Biochem. 86 (2015) pp. 5–16]
  241. Effects of climate warming and elevated CO 2 on autotrophic nitrification and nitrifiers in dryland ecosystems
  242. Variation in soil microbial communities associated with critically endangered Wollemi pine affects fungal, but not bacterial, assembly within seedling roots
  243. Increasing aridity reduces soil microbial diversity and abundance in global drylands
  244. Soil aggregate size mediates the impacts of cropping regimes on soil carbon and microbial communities
  245. Short-term carbon cycling responses of a mature eucalypt woodland to gradual stepwise enrichment of atmospheric CO2 concentration
  246. Biocrust-forming mosses mitigate the negative impacts of increasing aridity on ecosystem multifunctionality in drylands
  247. Deterministic processes vary during community assembly for ecologically dissimilar taxa
  248. Shifts in the microbial community structure explain the response of soil respiration to land-use change but not to climate warming
  249. Effects of extreme weather events and legume presence on mycorrhization ofPlantago lanceolataandHolcus lanatusin the field
  250. Water availability and abundance of microbial groups are key determinants of greenhouse gas fluxes in a dryland forest ecosystem
  251. Community Structure and Soil pH Determine Chemoautotrophic Carbon Dioxide Fixation in Drained Paddy Soils
  252. Distinct Circular Single-Stranded DNA Viruses Exist in Different Soil Types
  253. Temperature sensitivity of soil respiration rates enhanced by microbial community response
  254. Identifying qualitative effects of different grazing types on below-ground communities and function in a long-term field experiment
  255. Water addition regulates the metabolic activity of ammonia oxidizers responding to environmental perturbations in dry subhumid ecosystems
  256. Loss of microbial diversity in soils is coincident with reductions in some specialized functions
  257. Bio-pesticides: Harmful or harmless to ammonia oxidizing microorganisms? The case of a Paecilomyces lilacinus-based nematicide
  258. Microbial modulators of soil carbon storage: integrating genomic and metabolic knowledge for global prediction
  259. Bacterial communities' response to microcystins exposure and nutrient availability: Linking degradation capacity to community structure
  260. Harnessing plant-microbe interactions for enhancing farm productivity
  261. Methane, microbes and models: fundamental understanding of the soil methane cycle for future predictions
  262. Multi-factorial drivers of ammonia oxidizer communities: evidence from a national soil survey
  263. Evidence of Microbial Regulation of Biogeochemical Cycles from a Study on Methane Flux and Land Use Change
  264. Impact of carbon farming practices on soil carbon in northern New South Wales
  265. Cleaning contaminated environment: a growing challenge
  266. Multiplex T-RFLP Allows for Increased Target Number and Specificity: Detection of Salmonella enterica and Six Species of Listeria in a Single Test
  267. Plant–microbe interactions: novel applications for exploitation in multipurpose remediation technologies
  268. Emerging technologies in bioremediation: constraints and opportunities
  269. Potential applications of bioprocess technology in petroleum industry
  270. General Surveillance of the soil ecosystem: An approach to monitoring unexpected adverse effects of GMO's
  271. Transcriptional response of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to a phosphate-deficient Lolium perenne rhizosphere
  272. Microbial diversity affects self-organization of the soil-microbe system with consequences for function
  273. Antibiotic Resistance Gene Abundances Correlate with Metal and Geochemical Conditions in Archived Scottish Soils
  274. Electrical and mechanical properties of acrylonitrile‐butadiene‐styrene/multiwall carbon nanotube nanocomposites prepared by melt‐blending
  275. Assessing existing peatland models for their applicability for modelling greenhouse gas emissions from tropical peat soils
  276. Role of nitrogen in carbon mitigation in forest ecosystems
  277. Differential effect of afforestation on nitrogen-fixing and denitrifying communities and potential implications for nitrogen cycling
  278. Comparison of microbial community assays for the assessment of stream biofilm ecology
  279. Response of methanotrophic communities to afforestation and reforestation in New Zealand
  280. Links between Ammonia Oxidizer Community Structure, Abundance, and Nitrification Potential in Acidic Soils
  281. Long-term impacts of zinc and copper enriched sewage sludge additions on bacterial, archaeal and fungal communities in arable and grassland soils
  282. Climate extremes initiate ecosystem-regulating functions while maintaining productivity
  283. Funding studies of the unpredictable
  284. Microorganisms and climate change: terrestrial feedbacks and mitigation options
  285. Drug discovery from uncultivable microorganisms
  286. Exploring microbial diversity for biotechnology: the way forward
  287. Climate change and human health: an environmental perspective
  288. Archaea in a hyper-arid polar desert
  289. Repeated application of diluted olive mill wastewater induces changes in the structure of the soil microbial community
  290. Effect of continuous olive mill wastewater applications, in the presence and absence of nitrogen fertilization, on the structure of rhizosphere-soil fungal communities
  291. Response of  fungal, bacterial and ureolytic communities to synthetic sheep urine deposition in a grassland soil
  292. Soil methane oxidation and methanotroph responses to afforestation of pastures with Pinus radiata stands
  293. Isolation and Identification of Novel Microcystin-Degrading Bacteria
  294. Does grassland vegetation drive soil microbial diversity?
  295. Activity and structure of methanotrophic communities in landfill cover soils
  296. Soil genomics
  297. Physiological, biochemical and molecular responses of the soil microbial community after afforestation of pastures with Pinus radiata
  298. Impact of biotic and abiotic interaction on soil microbial communities and functions: A field study
  299. Organophosphorus-degrading bacteria: ecology and industrial applications
  300. Microbial DNA profiling by multiplex terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism for forensic comparison of soil and the influence of sample condition
  301. Multiple profiling of soil microbial communities identifies potential genetic markers of metal-enriched sewage sludge
  302. The role of Variovorax and other Comamonadaceae in sulfur transformations by microbial wheat rhizosphere communities exposed to different sulfur fertilization regimes
  303. Relationship between assemblages of mycorrhizal fungi and bacteria on grass roots
  304. Biochemical and molecular characterization of methanotrophs in soil from a pristine New Zealand beech forest
  305. Long-term exposure to Zn-spiked sewage sludge alters soil community structure
  306. Methane uptake in soils from Pinus radiata plantations, a reverting shrubland and adjacent pastures: Effects of land-use change, and soil texture, water and mineral nitrogen
  307. Effect of Afforestation and Reforestation of Pastures on the Activity and Population Dynamics of Methanotrophic Bacteria
  308. Influence of grass species and soil type on rhizosphere microbial community structure in grassland soils
  309. REMA: A computer-based mapping tool for analysis of restriction sites in multiple DNA sequences
  310. Multiplex-terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism
  311. Bioremedial potential of fenamiphos and chlorpyrifos degrading isolates: Influence of different environmental conditions
  312. Use of Multiplex Terminal Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism for Rapid and Simultaneous Analysis of Different Components of the Soil Microbial Community▿
  313. Microbial degradation of organophosphorus compounds
  314. Sheep-urine-induced changes in soil microbial community structure
  315. Investigating microbial community structure in soils by physiological, biochemical and molecular fingerprinting methods
  316. Microbial Degradation of Organophosphorus Xenobiotics: Metabolic Pathways and Molecular Basis
  317. Links between Plant and Rhizoplane Bacterial Communities in Grassland Soils, Characterized Using Molecular Techniques
  318. Cross-enhancement of accelerated biodegradation of organophosphorus compounds in soils: Dependence on structural similarity of compounds
  319. Non-specific biodegradation of the organophosphorus pesticides, cadusafos and ethoprophos, by two bacterial isolates
  320. Biodegradation of Chlorpyrifos by Enterobacter Strain B-14 and Its Use in Bioremediation of Contaminated Soils
  321. Unravelling rhizosphere–microbial interactions: opportunities and limitations
  322. Role of Soil pH in the Development of Enhanced Biodegradation of Fenamiphos
  323. Effects of Soil pH on the Biodegradation of Chlorpyrifos and Isolation of a Chlorpyrifos-Degrading Bacterium
  324. Degradation of chlorpyrifos, fenamiphos, and chlorothalonil alone and in combination and their effects on soil microbial activity
  325. Persistence of Chlorpyrifos, Fenamiphos, Chlorothalonil, and Pendimethalin in Soil and Their Effects on Soil Microbial Characteristics