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Yeasts associated with soil invertebrates
Biology and Fertility of Soils, 1993The hindgut of the diplopod Pachyiulus flavipes is inhabited by specific yeast populations. The yeast communities consist almost exclusively of ascomycetes, viz., Debaryomyces hansenii, Torulaspora delbrueckii, and Zygowilliopsis californica. Evidence is provided that the yeasts isolated from the gut can be considered symbionts that remain in a steady ...
B. A. Byzov +2 more
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Reduced colonization by soil invertebrates to irradiated decomposing wood in Chernobyl.
Science of the Total Environment, 2018Soil is inhabited by a range of microbes, invertebrates and vertebrates that disintegrate and decompose dead wood and leaf litter. These communities can be perturbed by ionizing radiation from natural radiation sources or from radiation originating from ...
A. Møller, Timothy A Mousseau
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Phylogeography of Austral soil invertebrates
2023Soil invertebrates are terrestrial animals belonging to ancient phyla that emerged almost half a billion years ago. They have since spread throughout all known landmasses, with contemporary distributions governed by geological and environmental change across spatial and temporal gradients across the globe.
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Soil Invertebrates Disrupt Carbon Flow Through Fungal Networks
Science, 2005Annual carbon flux through soil respiration is ten times greater than fossil fuel combustion, but its component parts are poorly understood because they are the product of complex multitrophic interactions between soil organisms. A major component of carbon flux from plants to soil occurs through networks of symbiotic arbuscular ...
Johnson, David +7 more
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Soil invertebrate fauna affect
AbstractNitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from soils contribute significantly to global warming. Mitigation of N2O emissions is severely hampered by a lack of understanding of its main controls. Fluxes can only partly be predicted from soil abiotic factors and microbial analyses – a possible role for soil fauna has until now largely been overlooked.
Kuiper, I. +3 more
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Invertebrates as bioindicators of soil use
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 1991Abstract We face an increasing demand from administrative, technical and environmental authorities for bioindicators. Animals, plants and community patterns, which register quantitative and qualitative environmental changes need to be monitored. This can range from simple chemical and physical sampling to quantifying the patterns of animal and plant ...
PAOLETTI, MAURIZIO +4 more
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