The clues were investigated based on the Great Oxidation Event that occurred 2.4 billion years ago, which gave birth to new life forms.
Microbes include bacteria, viruses, fungi, algae and archaea (single-celled microorganisms with a bacteria-like structure).
A collection of short dispatches from the field of climate microbiology conveys the contributions that single-celled life ...
Beneath our feet, an invisible world of electron exchanges quietly drives the chemistry that sustains ecosystems, controls ...
Electrons flow underground in ways far more extensive than once believed, forming networks that link distant chemical zones. Minerals, organic molecules, and specialized bacteria can act as bridges, ...
SYDNEY, Sept. 15 (Xinhua) -- A new body will unite the environmental expertise of researchers globally to assess and prioritize microbes for conservation, according to a statement released Monday by ...
Tiny ocean microbes called Prochlorococcus, once thought to be climate survivors, may struggle as seas warm. These cyanobacteria drive 5% of Earth’s photosynthesis and underpin much of the marine food ...