The ecological and evolutionary study of community formation, diversity, and stability is rooted in general theory and reinforced by decades of system-specific empirical work. Deploying these ideas to study the assembly, complexity, and dynamics of microbial communities living in and on eukaryotes has proved seductive, but challenging. The success of this research endeavour depends on our capacity to observe and characterize the distributions, abundances, and functional traits of microbiota, representing an array of technical and analytical challenges. Furthermore, a number of unique characteristics of microbial species, such as horizontal gene transfer, the production of public goods, toxin and antibiotic production, rapid evolution, and f...
The trillions of microbes living in the gut-the gut microbiota-play an important role in human biolo...
Human activities significantly affect all ecosystems on the planet, including the assemblages that c...
The microbiome is becoming recognized as a key determinant of host phenotype. Here, Henry et al. pre...
Microbial ecology is flourishing, and in the process, is making contributions to how the ecology and...
Microorganismal diversity can be explained in large part by selection imposed from both the abiotic ...
Microorganismal diversity can be explained in large part by selection imposed from both the abiotic ...
The human body carries vast communities of microbes that provide many benefits. Our microbiome is co...
In the past several years, we have witnessed an increased interest in understanding the structure an...
Microbial communities colonise virtually every habitable environment on earth. They live on us, insi...
<div><p>There has been an explosion of research on host-associated microbial communities (i.e.,micro...
Microbial communities colonise virtually every habitable environment on earth. They live on us, insi...
The trillions of microbes living in the gut-the gut microbiota-play an important role in human biolo...
Microbial life in nature is typically associated with two distinctive features: (i) the formation of...
Microbial life in nature is typically associated with two distinctive features: (i) the formation of...
The microbiome is becoming recognized as a key determinant of host phenotype. Here, Henry et al. pre...
The trillions of microbes living in the gut-the gut microbiota-play an important role in human biolo...
Human activities significantly affect all ecosystems on the planet, including the assemblages that c...
The microbiome is becoming recognized as a key determinant of host phenotype. Here, Henry et al. pre...
Microbial ecology is flourishing, and in the process, is making contributions to how the ecology and...
Microorganismal diversity can be explained in large part by selection imposed from both the abiotic ...
Microorganismal diversity can be explained in large part by selection imposed from both the abiotic ...
The human body carries vast communities of microbes that provide many benefits. Our microbiome is co...
In the past several years, we have witnessed an increased interest in understanding the structure an...
Microbial communities colonise virtually every habitable environment on earth. They live on us, insi...
<div><p>There has been an explosion of research on host-associated microbial communities (i.e.,micro...
Microbial communities colonise virtually every habitable environment on earth. They live on us, insi...
The trillions of microbes living in the gut-the gut microbiota-play an important role in human biolo...
Microbial life in nature is typically associated with two distinctive features: (i) the formation of...
Microbial life in nature is typically associated with two distinctive features: (i) the formation of...
The microbiome is becoming recognized as a key determinant of host phenotype. Here, Henry et al. pre...
The trillions of microbes living in the gut-the gut microbiota-play an important role in human biolo...
Human activities significantly affect all ecosystems on the planet, including the assemblages that c...
The microbiome is becoming recognized as a key determinant of host phenotype. Here, Henry et al. pre...