Viruses are non-living, acellular entities, and the most abundant biological agents on earth. They are widely acknowledged as having the capacity to influence global biogeochemical cycles by infecting the bacterial and archaeal populations that regulate carbon and nutrient turnover. Evidence suggests that the majority of viruses in wetlands are bacteriophages, but despite their importance, studies on how viruses control the prokaryotic community and the concomitant impacts on ecosystem function (such as carbon cycling and greenhouse gas flux) in wetlands are rare. Here we investigate virus-prokaryote interactions in freshwater wetland ecosystems in the context of their potential influence on biogeochemical cycling. Specifically, we (1) synt...
Marine studies have shown viral lysis of microorganisms releases DOC. But is the same true for fresh...
Watersaturated soil and sediment ecosystems (i.e. wetlands) are ecologically as well as economically...
International audienceThe discovery of an abundant and diverse virus community in oceans and lakes h...
International audienceThe viral component in aquatic systems clearly needs to be incorporated into f...
Wetlands store 20–30% of the world's soil carbon, and identifying the microbial controls on these ca...
Climate change is affecting how energy and matter flow through ecosystems, thereby altering global c...
Viruses are important drivers in the cycling of carbon and nutrients in aquatic ecosystems. Since vi...
All cellular organisms in aquatic environments are susceptible to virus attack. Viruses are the smal...
Over the last two decades, viruses in aquatic systems have been observed to modify, influence and co...
International audienceOver the last two decades, viruses in aquatic systems have been observed to mo...
Ecosystems are controlled by 'bottom-up' (resources) and 'top-down' (predation) forces. Viral infect...
International audienceViruses impact microbial activity and carbon cycling in various environments, ...
Climate change threatens to release abundant carbon that is sequestered at high latitudes, but the c...
In aquatic environments, the consensus of viral impact on bacterial carbon metabolism with the nutri...
Marine studies have shown viral lysis of microorganisms releases DOC. But is the same true for fresh...
Watersaturated soil and sediment ecosystems (i.e. wetlands) are ecologically as well as economically...
International audienceThe discovery of an abundant and diverse virus community in oceans and lakes h...
International audienceThe viral component in aquatic systems clearly needs to be incorporated into f...
Wetlands store 20–30% of the world's soil carbon, and identifying the microbial controls on these ca...
Climate change is affecting how energy and matter flow through ecosystems, thereby altering global c...
Viruses are important drivers in the cycling of carbon and nutrients in aquatic ecosystems. Since vi...
All cellular organisms in aquatic environments are susceptible to virus attack. Viruses are the smal...
Over the last two decades, viruses in aquatic systems have been observed to modify, influence and co...
International audienceOver the last two decades, viruses in aquatic systems have been observed to mo...
Ecosystems are controlled by 'bottom-up' (resources) and 'top-down' (predation) forces. Viral infect...
International audienceViruses impact microbial activity and carbon cycling in various environments, ...
Climate change threatens to release abundant carbon that is sequestered at high latitudes, but the c...
In aquatic environments, the consensus of viral impact on bacterial carbon metabolism with the nutri...
Marine studies have shown viral lysis of microorganisms releases DOC. But is the same true for fresh...
Watersaturated soil and sediment ecosystems (i.e. wetlands) are ecologically as well as economically...
International audienceThe discovery of an abundant and diverse virus community in oceans and lakes h...