作者
Stacey M Trevathan-Tackett, Craig DH Sherman, Megan J Huggett, Alexandra H Campbell, Bonnie Laverock, Valentina Hurtado-McCormick, Justin R Seymour, Alana Firl, Lauren F Messer, Tracy D Ainsworth, Karita L Negandhi, Daniele Daffonchio, Suhelen Egan, Aschwin H Engelen, Marco Fusi, Torsten Thomas, Laura Vann, Alejandra Hernandez-Agreda, Han Ming Gan, Ezequiel M Marzinelli, Peter D Steinberg, Leo Hardtke, Peter I Macreadie
发表日期
2019/10/21
期刊
Nature ecology & evolution
卷号
3
页码范围
1509–1520
出版商
Nature Publishing Group
简介
Research into the microbiomes of natural environments is changing the way ecologists and evolutionary biologists view the importance of microorganisms in ecosystem function. This is particularly relevant in ocean environments, where microorganisms constitute the majority of biomass and control most of the major biogeochemical cycles, including those that regulate Earth’s climate. Coastal marine environments provide goods and services that are imperative to human survival and well-being (for example, fisheries and water purification), and emerging evidence indicates that these ecosystem services often depend on complex relationships between communities of microorganisms (the ‘microbiome’) and the environment or their hosts — termed the ‘holobiont’. Understanding of coastal ecosystem function must therefore be framed under the holobiont concept, whereby macroorganisms and their associated …
引用总数
202020212022202320241123282512
学术搜索中的文章
SM Trevathan-Tackett, CDH Sherman, MJ Huggett… - Nature ecology & evolution, 2019