However the precise details of how this happens remain largely unexplored says co-corresponding author Eric Martens Ph d. an assistant professor in the Department of Microbiology & Immunology at the U-M Medical school.
The research offers new perspective on evolutionary biology microbiology and the production of natural gas and may shed light on climate change agriculture and human health.
This innovative work demonstrates the importance of a new global regulatory system in methanogens said William Whitman a professor of microbiology at the University of Georgia who is familiar with the study
This is the result of a five-year research project performed by evolution biologists microbiologists and computer scientists at Radboud University Nijmegen and published this week in the European Journal of Protistology.
The above story is provided based on materials by American Society for Microbiology. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length h
D. a professor of microbiology and immunology at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of medicine. The researchers reported their work yesterday in Nature Nanotechnology.
And the broad team of researchers--Pauli tapped entomologists limnologists and bacteriologists--found the algae in samples taken from the stomachs of three-toed sloths.
and Beijing China report their findings in mbio the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
The above story is provided based on materials by American Society for Microbiology. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
diet genetics and the microbiology of the cow's rumen. We think that animal genetics may well influence their gut microbiology.
However this link has not been proved and we are still in the data collection phase explains Lorenzo Morelli director of the faculty of agriculture at the Catholic University of Sacred Heart in Piacenza Italy who is a microbiologist and a project scientist.
Until now the European cattle industry was interested mainly in improving aspects of livestock such as their fertility and their overall shape.
and microbiology according to John Mcewan a senior scientist at Agresearch New zealand based at Invernay near Dunedin.
Paulina Estrada-de Los santos of the department of microbiology at Mexico's Instituto Politã cnico Nacional Prolongaciã n de Carpio y Plan de Ayala;
The new paper featured in the January issue of Applied and Environmental Microbiology looks for the first time at the reaction of free-living nitrogen-fixing microorganisms called diazotrophs to the deforestation.
and consult a professor of entomological parasitology. Once they are convinced that a bug is safe,
Microbiologist Jan Narciso at the ARS Citrus and Subtropical Products Laboratory in Winter Haven Fla.,
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