Cable bacteria induce long-distance electron transport in the seafloor and can exert a powerful control on the elemental cycling in marine sediments by creating extreme excursions in porewater pH. Yet, the natural distribution of cable bacteria is still largely unknown, and so their role in coastal biogeochemical cycling remains poorly quantified. Here we show that cable bacteria can be abundant in the sediments of intertidal bivalve reefs, where they strongly influence the pore water geochemistry, resulting in a potentially beneficial interaction between the sulfur oxidizing microbes and biodepositing fauna. Cable bacteria occurred in sediments accumulating within mussel and oyster reefs in the Wadden Sea (The Netherlands), at cumulative f...
Marine cable bacteria (Candidatus Electrothrix) and large colorless sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (e.g.,...
Seasonal oxygen depletion (hypoxia) in coastal bottom waters can lead to the release and persistence...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Cable bacteria are long, filamentoussulphur-oxidizing bacteria that induce long-distanceelectron tra...
Cable bacteria can strongly alter sediment biogeochemistry. Here, we used laboratory incubations to ...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Recently, a novel electrogenic type of sulphur oxidation was documented in marine sediments, whereby...
In 2010, a completely novel type of microbial metabolism was discovered in marine sediments, which i...
Cable bacteria are multicellular, filamentous microorganisms that are capable of transporting electr...
AbstractRecently, a novel “electrogenic” type of sulfur oxidation has been documented in marine sedi...
Recently, a novel “electrogenic” type of sulfur oxidation has been documented in marine sediments, w...
Recently, long filamentous bacteria have been reported conducting electrons over centimetre distance...
Marine cable bacteria (Candidatus Electrothrix) and large colorless sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (e.g.,...
Seasonal oxygen depletion (hypoxia) in coastal bottom waters can lead to the release and persistence...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Cable bacteria are long, filamentoussulphur-oxidizing bacteria that induce long-distanceelectron tra...
Cable bacteria can strongly alter sediment biogeochemistry. Here, we used laboratory incubations to ...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Recently, a novel electrogenic type of sulphur oxidation was documented in marine sediments, whereby...
In 2010, a completely novel type of microbial metabolism was discovered in marine sediments, which i...
Cable bacteria are multicellular, filamentous microorganisms that are capable of transporting electr...
AbstractRecently, a novel “electrogenic” type of sulfur oxidation has been documented in marine sedi...
Recently, a novel “electrogenic” type of sulfur oxidation has been documented in marine sediments, w...
Recently, long filamentous bacteria have been reported conducting electrons over centimetre distance...
Marine cable bacteria (Candidatus Electrothrix) and large colorless sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (e.g.,...
Seasonal oxygen depletion (hypoxia) in coastal bottom waters can lead to the release and persistence...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...