Interventions involving bacteria or fungi could help to sequester greenhouse gases, create more sustainable products and ...
The “slow but consistent increase” in global temperatures is enabling climate-sensitive disease vectors, such as mosquitoes ...
Rising temperatures and changing environmental conditions in the Great Lakes are contributing to harmful algal blooms, and ...
"Measured by their total mass, there are about three times more microorganisms in the oceans than all the marine animals combined. Climate change-induced shifts in the microbial food web of the ...
Fungi can keep us healthy or cause disease. As climate change drives fungi to adapt, their impact on our health is changing.
It’s important for scientists to understand how these extreme weather events will influence the sewage-associated viruses discharged into the environment.
That is because harmful bacteria in lakes and rivers are causing many beaches to close. The problem has been worsened by climate change, which is making the water warmer and causing more rain.
The oceans teem with photosynthesizing bacteria, tiny-tailed dinoflagellates gobbling other plankton, algae surrounded by ...
An insect ecology professor at the University of Kentucky explored her research on how bacteria affects spider reproduction ...
From ice cores extracted from the Tibetan Plateau, scientists recovered the equivalent of 1,705 virus species. Reading their ...
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