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Functional Microbiomes. Advances in Ecological Research Volume 67

  • Book

  • November 2022
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5597205

Functional Microbiomes, Volume 67 in the Advances in Ecological Research series, highlights new advances in the field, with this new release highlighting timely content written by an international board of authors. Sections cover the Linking microbial body size to community co-occurrences and stability at multiple geographical scales in agricultural soils, The functional microbiome of grapevine throughout plant evolutionary history and lifetime, Compendium of analytical methods for sampling, characterisation and quantification of bioaerosols, The microbial solution to oil sand pollution: understanding the microbiomes, metabolic pathways and mechanisms involved in naphthenic acid (NA) biodegradation, The Gut Microbiome in Health and Disease: Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, and The need to understand how multiple chemical stressors impact freshwater aquatic microbiomes

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Table of Contents

Preface David Andrew Bohan and Alex J. Dumbrell 1. Linking microbial body size to community co-occurrences and stability at multiple geographical scales in agricultural soils Alex J. Dumbrell, Pengfa Li, Ming Liu and Zhongpei Li 2. The functional microbiome of grapevine throughout plant evolutionary history and lifetime Corinne Vacher, David Andrew Bohan, Paola Fournier, Lucille Pellan, Didac Barroso-Bergad?, Thierry Candresse, Fran?ois Delmotte, Marie-C?cile Dufour, Virginie Lauvergeat, Claire Le Marrec, Armelle Marais, Guilherme Martins, Isabelle Masneuf-Pomar?de, Patrice Rey, David Sherman, Patrice This, Cl?mence Frioux and Simon Labarthe 3. Compendium of analytical methods for sampling, characterisation and quantification of bioaerosols Corinne Whitby, Robert Michael William Ferguson and Alex J. Dumbrell 4. The microbial solution to oil sand pollution: understanding the microbiomes, metabolic pathways and mechanisms involved in naphthenic acid (NA) biodegradation David Andrew Bohan, Alex J. Dumbrell and Corinne Whitby 5. The Gut Microbiome in Health and Disease: Inflammatory Bowel Diseases Patrick Daniel Varga-Weisz and Salma El-Sahhar 6. Mind the gaps
The need to understand how multiple chemical stressors impact freshwater aquatic microbiomes Robert Michael William Ferguson, Alessia Bani, Kate Randall, Benjamin Gregson, Erin Losty, David Clark and Drew Henderson

Authors

David Bohan Agricultural Ecologist, UMR 1347 Agroecologie, Dijon, France. Dave Bohan is an agricultural ecologist with an interest in predator-prey regulation interactions. Dave uses a model system of a carabid beetle predator and two agriculturally important prey; slugs and weed seeds. He has shown that carabids find and consume slug prey, within fields, and that this leads to regulation of slug populations and interesting spatial 'waves' in slug and carabid density. The carabids also intercept weed seeds shed by weed plants before they enter the soil, and thus carabids can regulate the long-term store of seeds in the seedbank on national scales. What is interesting about this system is that it contains two important regulation ecosystem services delivered by one group of service providers, the carabids. This system therefore integrates, in miniature, many of the problems of interaction between services.

Dave has most recently begun to work with networks. He developed, with colleagues, a learning methodology to build networks from sample date. This has produced the largest, replicated network in agriculture. One of his particular interests is how behaviours and dynamics at the species level, as studied using the carabid-slug-weed system, build across species and their interactions to the dynamics of networks at the ecosystem level. Alex Dumbrell University of Essex, UK. Dr Alex Dumbrell works at the School of Biological Sciences, University of Essex, UK.