All Stories

  1. Novel PCB-degrading Rhodococcus strains able to promote plant growth for assisted rhizoremediation of historically polluted soils
  2. Rhizoremediation of weathered PCBs in a heavily contaminated agricultural soil: Results of a biostimulation trial in semi field conditions
  3. Integrated technological and management solutions for wastewater treatment and efficient agricultural reuse in Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia
  4. Methods for the genetic manipulation of marine bacteria
  5. The stage of soil development modulates rhizosphere effect along a High Arctic desert chronosequence
  6. Rhizoremediation half-lives of PCBs: Role of congener composition, organic carbon forms, bioavailability, microbial activity, plant species and soil conditions, on the prediction of fate and persistence in soil
  7. Biotechnologies for Marine Oil Spill Cleanup: Indissoluble Ties with Microorganisms
  8. Bacteria Associated to Plants Naturally Selected in a Historical PCB Polluted Soil Show Potential to Sustain Natural Attenuation
  9. Differentiating current and past PCB and PCDD/F sources: The role of a large contaminated soil site in an industrialized city area
  10. Phyto-rhizoremediation of polychlorinated biphenyl contaminated soils: An outlook on plant-microbe beneficial interactions
  11. Hydrocarbonoclastic Alcanivorax Isolates Exhibit Different Physiological and Expression Responses to n-dodecane
  12. Salicornia strobilacea (Synonym of Halocnemum strobilaceum) Grown under Different Tidal Regimes Selects Rhizosphere Bacteria Capable of Promoting Plant Growth
  13. Root-associated bacteria promote grapevine growth: from the laboratory to the field
  14. An impaired metabolic response to hydrostatic pressure explains Alcanivorax borkumensis recorded distribution in the deep marine water column
  15. Exploiting Hydrocarbon-Degrading Indigenous Bacteria for Bioremediation and Phytoremediation of a Multicontaminated Soil
  16. Diversity, ecological distribution and biotechnological potential of Actinobacteria inhabiting seamounts and non-seamounts in the Tyrrhenian Sea
  17. Hydrocarbon pollutants shape bacterial community assembly of harbor sediments
  18. Microbial oil-degradation under mild hydrostatic pressure (10 MPa): which pathways are impacted in piezosensitive hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria?
  19. Phytoremediation of a multi contaminated soil: mercury and arsenic phytoextraction assisted by mobilizing agent and plant growth promoting bacteria
  20. Biogeochemical, Isotopic and Bacterial Distributions Trace Oceanic Abyssal Circulation
  21. Extreme Marine Environments (Brines, Seeps, and Smokers)
  22. Draft Genome Sequence of the Hydrocarbon-Degrading Bacterium Alcanivorax dieselolei KS-293 Isolated from Surface Seawater in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea
  23. Microbial ecology-based methods to characterize the bacterial communities of non-model insects
  24. Oasis desert farming selects environment-specific date palm root endophytic communities and cultivable bacteria that promote resistance to drought
  25. Bacterial population and biodegradation potential in chronically crude oil-contaminated marine sediments are strongly linked to temperature
  26. BIODESERT: Exploring and Exploiting the Microbial Resource of Hot and Cold Deserts
  27. Bacterial Diversity and Bioremediation Potential of the Highly Contaminated Marine Sediments at El-Max District (Egypt, Mediterranean Sea)
  28. Electricity generation using white and red wine lees in air cathode microbial fuel cells
  29. Microbial Life in Volcanic Lakes
  30. Marine Microorganisms as Source of Stereoselective Esterases and Ketoreductases: Kinetic Resolution of a Prostaglandin Intermediate
  31. Geosphere-Biosphere Interactions in Bio-Activity Volcanic Lakes: Evidences from Hule and Rìo Cuarto (Costa Rica)
  32. Improved plant resistance to drought is promoted by the root-associated microbiome as a water stress-dependent trait
  33. Using olive mill wastewater to improve performance in producing electricity from domestic wastewater by using single-chamber microbial fuel cell
  34. Are drought-resistance promoting bacteria cross-compatible with different plant models?
  35. Corrigendum to "Biogeography of planktonic bacterial communities across the whole Mediterranean Sea" published in Ocean Sci., 9, 585–595, 2013
  36. Biogeography of planktonic bacterial communities across the whole Mediterranean Sea
  37. A Laboratory of Extremophiles: Iceland Coordination Action for Research Activities on Life in Extreme Environments (CAREX) Field Campaign
  38. Anammox bacterial populations in deep marine hypersaline gradient systems
  39. Microdiversity of Deep-Sea Bacillales Isolated from Tyrrhenian Sea Sediments as Revealed by ARISA, 16S rRNA Gene Sequencing and BOX-PCR Fingerprinting
  40. Plant Growth Promotion Potential Is Equally Represented in Diverse Grapevine Root-Associated Bacterial Communities from Different Biopedoclimatic Environments
  41. Potential for Plant Growth Promotion of Rhizobacteria Associated withSalicorniaGrowing in Tunisian Hypersaline Soils
  42. A Drought Resistance-Promoting Microbiome Is Selected by Root System under Desert Farming
  43. Mineral–microbe interactions: Biotechnological potential of bioweathering
  44. Microbial diversity in deep hypersaline anoxic basins
  45. Gut microbiome dysbiosis and honeybee health
  46. Influence of transgenic Bt176 and non-transgenic corn silage on the structure of rumen bacterial communities
  47. Bacterial Communities Involved in Soil Formation and Plant Establishment Triggered by Pyrite Bioweathering on Arctic Moraines
  48. The genesis of actively growing siliceous stromatolites: Evidence from Lake Specchio di Venere, Pantelleria Island, Italy
  49. Gammaproteobacteria occurrence and microdiversity in Tyrrhenian Sea sediments as revealed by cultivation-dependent and -independent approaches
  50. Rock weathering creates oases of life in a High Arctic desert
  51. Deterioration of medieval painting in the chapel of the Holy Nail, Siena (Italy) partially treated with Paraloid B72
  52. Sulfur cycling and methanogenesis primarily drive microbial colonization of the highly sulfidic Urania deep hypersaline basin
  53. Biodiversity of prokaryotic communities in sediments of different sub-basins of the Venice lagoon
  54. Diversity and phylogeny of culturable spore-forming Bacilli isolated from marine sediments
  55. DNA is preserved and maintains transforming potential after contact with brines of the deep anoxic hypersaline lakes of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea
  56. Exploration of methods used to describe bacterial communities in silage of maize (Zea mays) cultivars
  57. Fluorescent-BOX-PCR for resolving bacterial genetic diversity, endemism and biogeography
  58. Low prevalence ofblaTEMgenes in Arctic environments and agricultural soil and rhizosphere
  59. Strategy for In Situ Detection of Natural Transformation-Based Horizontal Gene Transfer Events
  60. Bacteria of the genus Asaia stably associate with Anopheles stephensi , an Asian malarial mosquito vector
  61. A Novel Reductive Dehalogenase, Identified in a Contaminated Groundwater Enrichment Culture and in Desulfitobacterium dichloroeliminans Strain DCA1, Is Linked to Dehalogenation of 1,2-Dichloroethane
  62. Synthetic Consolidants Attacked by Melanin-Producing Fungi: Case Study of the Biodeterioration of Milan (Italy) Cathedral Marble Treated with Acrylics
  63. Diversity of Bacillus anthracis Strains in Georgia and of Vaccine Strains from the Former Soviet Union
  64. Biodeterioration of a fresco by biofilm forming bacteria
  65. Usefulness of length heterogeneity-PCR for monitoring lactic acid bacteria succession during maize ensiling
  66. Stratified prokaryote network in the oxic–anoxic transition of a deep-sea halocline
  67. Microbial Succession in a Compost-packed Biofilter Treating Benzene-contaminated Air
  68. Strategy for Identification of Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis Strains Closely Related to Bacillus anthracis
  69. Response of methanogen populations to organic load increase during anaerobic digestion of olive mill wastewater
  70. The autolytic phenotype of the Bacillus cereus group
  71. Response of 1,2-dichloroethane-adapted microbial communities to ex-situ biostimulation of polluted groundwater
  72. Laboratory-scale experiments with a powdered compost biofilter treating benzene-polluted air
  73. The Enigma of Prokaryotic Life in Deep Hypersaline Anoxic Basins
  74. Bacterial communities associated with the rhizosphere of transgenic Bt 176 maize (Zea mays) and its non transgenic counterpart
  75. Comparison of Different Primer Sets for Use in Automated Ribosomal Intergenic Spacer Analysis of Complex Bacterial Communities
  76. Nature of Polymorphisms in 16S-23S rRNA Gene Intergenic Transcribed Spacer Fingerprinting of Bacillus and Related Genera
  77. Genetic relationship in the ‘Bacillus cereusgroup’ by rep-PCR fingerprinting and sequencing of aBacillus anthracis-specific rep-PCR fragment
  78. Response of bacterial community during bioremediation of an oil-polluted soil*
  79. Bacillus anthracis Diverges from Related Clades of the Bacillus cereus Group in 16S-23S Ribosomal DNA Intergenic Transcribed Spacers Containing tRNA Genes
  80. Characterization of a repetitive element polymorphism-polymerase chain reaction chromosomal marker that discriminates Bacillus anthracis from related species
  81. Aromatic hydrocarbon degradation patterns and catechol 2,3-dioxygenase genes in microbial cultures from deep anoxic hypersaline lakes in the eastern Mediterranean sea
  82. Homoduplex and Heteroduplex Polymorphisms of the Amplified Ribosomal 16S-23S Internal Transcribed Spacers Describe Genetic Relationships in the “Bacillus cereus Group”
  83. Restriction site insertion-PCR (RSI-PCR) for rapid discrimination and typing of closely related microbial strains
  84. 16S–23S rRNA internal transcribed spacers as molecular markers for the species of the 16S rRNA group I of the genus Bacillus
  85. PCR fingerprinting of whole genomes: the spacers between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes and of intergenic tRNA gene regions reveal a different intraspecific genomic variability of Bacillus cereus and Bacillus licheniformis
  86. Single strand conformation polymorphism analysis of PCR-tDNA fingerprinting to address the identification of Bacillus species
  87. Lead-resistant microorganisms from red stains of marble of the Certosa of Pavia, Italy and use of nucleic acid-based techniques for their detection