Climate change is affecting how energy and matter flow through ecosystems, thereby altering global carbon and nutrient cycles. Microorganisms play a fundamental role in carbon and nutrient cycling and are thus an integral link between ecosystems and climate. Here, we highlight a major black box hindering our ability to anticipate ecosystem climate responses: viral infections within complex microbial food webs. We show how understanding and predicting ecosystem responses to warming could be challenging-if not impossible-without accounting for the direct and indirect effects of viral infections on different microbes (bacteria, archaea, fungi, protists) that together perform diverse ecosystem functions. Importantly, understanding how rising te...
1. In natural communities, multiple host and parasitoid species are linked to form complex networks ...
Viruses are non-living, acellular entities, and the most abundant biological agents on earth. They a...
Earth’s climate is warming, and there is evidence that increased temperature alters soil C cycling, ...
International audienceThe viral component in aquatic systems clearly needs to be incorporated into f...
Climate change threatens to release abundant carbon that is sequestered at high latitudes, but the c...
Climate change threatens to release abundant carbon that is sequestered at high latitudes, but the c...
Viruses are important drivers in the cycling of carbon and nutrients in aquatic ecosystems. Since vi...
International audiencePeatlands contain approximately one third of all soil organic carbon (SOC). Wa...
The rise of global temperature causes the degradation of the substantial reserves of carbon (C) stor...
There is considerable interest in understanding the biological mechanisms that regulate carbon excha...
Sea-surface warming, sea-ice melting and related freshening, changes in circulation and mixing regim...
There is considerable interest in understanding the biological mechanisms that regulate carbon excha...
Climate change is the most serious challenge facing humanity. Microbes produce and consume three maj...
Anthropogenic climate change threatens ecosystem functioning. Soil biodiversity is essential for mai...
Soil microbes play critical roles in regulating terrestrial carbon (C) cycle and its feedback to cli...
1. In natural communities, multiple host and parasitoid species are linked to form complex networks ...
Viruses are non-living, acellular entities, and the most abundant biological agents on earth. They a...
Earth’s climate is warming, and there is evidence that increased temperature alters soil C cycling, ...
International audienceThe viral component in aquatic systems clearly needs to be incorporated into f...
Climate change threatens to release abundant carbon that is sequestered at high latitudes, but the c...
Climate change threatens to release abundant carbon that is sequestered at high latitudes, but the c...
Viruses are important drivers in the cycling of carbon and nutrients in aquatic ecosystems. Since vi...
International audiencePeatlands contain approximately one third of all soil organic carbon (SOC). Wa...
The rise of global temperature causes the degradation of the substantial reserves of carbon (C) stor...
There is considerable interest in understanding the biological mechanisms that regulate carbon excha...
Sea-surface warming, sea-ice melting and related freshening, changes in circulation and mixing regim...
There is considerable interest in understanding the biological mechanisms that regulate carbon excha...
Climate change is the most serious challenge facing humanity. Microbes produce and consume three maj...
Anthropogenic climate change threatens ecosystem functioning. Soil biodiversity is essential for mai...
Soil microbes play critical roles in regulating terrestrial carbon (C) cycle and its feedback to cli...
1. In natural communities, multiple host and parasitoid species are linked to form complex networks ...
Viruses are non-living, acellular entities, and the most abundant biological agents on earth. They a...
Earth’s climate is warming, and there is evidence that increased temperature alters soil C cycling, ...