
Peatland Plants Hide Responses to Environmental Change
Fine roots grow dramatically faster in an experimentally warmed peatland
Fine roots grow dramatically faster in an experimentally warmed peatland
Computers learn from a combination of experimental and evolutionary data to enhance the function of useful proteins.
A new model predicts small-scale differences in methane emissions from tropical soils on a hillside during drought and recovery.
Scientists demonstrate the value of a new global atmosphere model for the Energy Exascale Earth System Model.
Six years of radar data from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility site in Utqiaġvik, Alaska provide important details on how secondary ice particles form in Arctic clouds.
Two new technologies allow scientists to edit specific species and genes within complex laboratory bacterial communities.
Microbial Cheaters and their Impact on Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Degrading pyrogenic (fire-affected) organic matter is an important ecosystem function of fungi in post-fire environments.
Scientists identify key features in microbes that predict how warming affects carbon dioxide emissions.
A few common bacteria use most of the carbon in soil
Bacteria collection opens new directions for research on cottonwoods, poplars, and other trees useful for biofuel and other applications.
Ecological assembly and source tracking models characterize the initial assembly of the poplar microbiome across plant-associated habitats.