Page 2 - Lin Xing Chen News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from Lin xing chen. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In Lin Xing Chen Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Climate-friendly microbes chomp dead plants without releasing heat-trapping methane


 E-Mail
IMAGE: Tengchong Yunnan hot springs in China, where some of the newly described Brockarchaeota were collected.
view more 
Credit: Jian-Yu Jiao/Sun Yat-Sen University
The tree of life just got a little bigger: A team of scientists from the U.S. and China has identified an entirely new group of microbes quietly living in hot springs, geothermal systems and hydrothermal sediments around the world. The microbes appear to be playing an important role in the global carbon cycle by helping break down decaying plants without producing the greenhouse gas methane.
Climate scientists should take these new microbes into account in their models to more accurately understand how they will impact climate change, said Brett Baker, assistant professor at The University of Texas at Austin s Marine Science Institute who led the research published April 23 in ....

United States , South Africa , Yellowstone National Park , Brett Baker , Wen Jun Li , Thomas Brock , Jillianf Banfield , Hong Chen Jiang , Nina Dombrowski , University Of California , Nature Communications , China University Of Geosciences , National Natural Science Foundation Of China , Dartmouth College , Royal Netherlands Institute For Sea Research , Sun Yat Sen University China , Utrecht University , Engineering Guangdong Laboratory China , Sun Yat Sen University , China Ministry Of Science , Us National Science Foundation , Marine Science Institute , Yellowstone National , Valerie De Anda , Southern Marine Science , Engineering Guangdong Laboratory ,

Microbes in dental plaque look more like relatives in soil than those on the tongue


 E-Mail
From the perspective of A. Murat Eren, PhD, the mouth is the perfect place to study microbial communities. Not only is it the beginning of the GI tract, but it s also a very special and small environment that s microbially diverse enough that we can really start to answer interesting questions about microbiomes and their evolution, said Eren, an assistant professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Chicago.
There s a surprising amount of site specificity, in that you find defined patterns of microbes in different areas of the mouth the microbes associated with the tongue are very different from those on the plaque on your teeth, he continued. Your tongue microbes are more similar to those living on someone else s tongue than they are to those living in your throat or on your gums! ....

Hyde Park , United States , Jessica Mark Welch , Abigailc Schmid , Mahmoud Yousef , Nora Downey , Floyde Dewhirst , Hillaryg Morrison , Lin Xing Chen , Institut Fran , Sonny Tm Lee , Amyd Willis , Karen Lolans , Mark Welch , Tomo Delmont , Simon Roux , Andrear Watson , University Of California , Craniofacial Research Grants , Frankr Lillie Research Innovation Award , Us Department Of Energy , University Of Washington , University Of Chicago Medicine Biological Sciences , Forsyth Institute , Duchossois Center , University Of Chicago ,