Soil protists are commonly suggested being solely bacterivorous, serving together with bacterivorous nematodes as the main controllers of the bacterial energy channel in soil food webs. In contrast, the fungal energy channel is assumed to be controlled by arthropods and mycophagous nematodes. This perspective accepted by most soil biologists is, however, challenged by functional studies conducted by taxonomists that revealed a range of mycophagous protists. In order to increase the knowledge on the functional importance of mycophagous protists we isolated and initiated cultures of protist taxa and tested eight for facultative feeding on diverse fungi in microcosm experiments. Two different flagellate species of the genus Cercomonas, the tes...
Abstract Soil microorganisms evolved several strategies to compete for limited nutrients in soil. Ba...
Protists, the most diverse eukaryotes, are largely considered to be free-living bacterivores, but va...
Protists include all eukaryotes except plants, fungi and animals. They are an essential, yet often f...
Soil protists are commonly suggested being solely bacterivorous, serving together with bacterivorous...
Abstract Protists (=protozoa) are commonly treated as bacterivores that control the bacterial energy...
Trophic interactions are crucial for carbon cycling in food webs. Traditionally, eukaryotic micropre...
Soils host the most complex communities on Earth, including the most diverse and abundant eukaryotes...
Soils host the most complex communities of organisms, which are still largely considered as an unkno...
The best-known function of soil protists is as bacteria feeders, protists consume bacteria prey and ...
The high numbers and diversity of protists in soil systems have long been presumed, but their true d...
Protozoa are the major consumers of bacterial production in soil, forming the base of the heterotrop...
<p>Mycophagous soil bacteria are able to obtain nutrients from living fungal hyphae. However, with e...
Protists, the most diverse eukaryotes, are largely considered to be free-living bacterivores, but va...
Abstract Soil microorganisms evolved several strategies to compete for limited nutrients in soil. Ba...
Protists, the most diverse eukaryotes, are largely considered to be free-living bacterivores, but va...
Protists include all eukaryotes except plants, fungi and animals. They are an essential, yet often f...
Soil protists are commonly suggested being solely bacterivorous, serving together with bacterivorous...
Abstract Protists (=protozoa) are commonly treated as bacterivores that control the bacterial energy...
Trophic interactions are crucial for carbon cycling in food webs. Traditionally, eukaryotic micropre...
Soils host the most complex communities on Earth, including the most diverse and abundant eukaryotes...
Soils host the most complex communities of organisms, which are still largely considered as an unkno...
The best-known function of soil protists is as bacteria feeders, protists consume bacteria prey and ...
The high numbers and diversity of protists in soil systems have long been presumed, but their true d...
Protozoa are the major consumers of bacterial production in soil, forming the base of the heterotrop...
<p>Mycophagous soil bacteria are able to obtain nutrients from living fungal hyphae. However, with e...
Protists, the most diverse eukaryotes, are largely considered to be free-living bacterivores, but va...
Abstract Soil microorganisms evolved several strategies to compete for limited nutrients in soil. Ba...
Protists, the most diverse eukaryotes, are largely considered to be free-living bacterivores, but va...
Protists include all eukaryotes except plants, fungi and animals. They are an essential, yet often f...