The unusually harsh environmental conditions of terrestrial Antarctic habitats result in ecosystems with simplified trophic structures, where microbial processes are especially dominant as drivers of soil-borne nutrient cycling. We examined soil-borne Antarctic communities (bacteria, fungi and nematodes) at five locations along a southern latitudinal gradient from the Falkland Islands (51 degrees S) to the base of the Antarctic Peninsula (72 degrees S), and compared principally vegetated vs. fell-field locations at three of these sites. Results of molecular (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, real-time PCR), biochemical (ergosterol, phospholipid fatty acids) and traditional microbiological (temperature- and medium-related CFU) analyse...
International audienceAntarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with...
Antarctic soils are extremely cold, dry, and oligotrophic, yet harbour surprisingly high bacterial d...
By 2100, the mean air temperature at the Earth\u2019s surface is predicted to increase by 1.4 \ub0C ...
The unusually harsh environmental conditions of terrestrial Antarctic habitats result in ecosystems ...
The unusually harsh environmental conditions of terrestrial Antarctic habitats result in ecosystems ...
Livingston Island, located at the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, is characterised by an oceanic pol...
Biotic communities and ecosystem dynamics in terrestrial Antarctica are limited by an array of extre...
It is commonly known that bacteria are ubiquitously distributed in soil environments. They are heavi...
Antarctic soils are extremely cold, dry, and oligotrophic, yet harbour surprisingly high bacterial d...
Antarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with decomposition and nut...
International audienceAntarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with...
In continental Antarctica, autotrophs are exclusively represented by cyanobacteria, algae, lichens a...
Antarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with decomposition and nut...
International audienceAntarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with...
The average temperature on the Antarctic Peninsula has risen \u3e 2.9°C over the past 50 years. This...
International audienceAntarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with...
Antarctic soils are extremely cold, dry, and oligotrophic, yet harbour surprisingly high bacterial d...
By 2100, the mean air temperature at the Earth\u2019s surface is predicted to increase by 1.4 \ub0C ...
The unusually harsh environmental conditions of terrestrial Antarctic habitats result in ecosystems ...
The unusually harsh environmental conditions of terrestrial Antarctic habitats result in ecosystems ...
Livingston Island, located at the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, is characterised by an oceanic pol...
Biotic communities and ecosystem dynamics in terrestrial Antarctica are limited by an array of extre...
It is commonly known that bacteria are ubiquitously distributed in soil environments. They are heavi...
Antarctic soils are extremely cold, dry, and oligotrophic, yet harbour surprisingly high bacterial d...
Antarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with decomposition and nut...
International audienceAntarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with...
In continental Antarctica, autotrophs are exclusively represented by cyanobacteria, algae, lichens a...
Antarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with decomposition and nut...
International audienceAntarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with...
The average temperature on the Antarctic Peninsula has risen \u3e 2.9°C over the past 50 years. This...
International audienceAntarctic ecosystems are fascinating in their limited trophic complexity, with...
Antarctic soils are extremely cold, dry, and oligotrophic, yet harbour surprisingly high bacterial d...
By 2100, the mean air temperature at the Earth\u2019s surface is predicted to increase by 1.4 \ub0C ...