Among the trillions of microbes that live in the gut, one obscure bacterium has suddenly become a star of obesity research.
Scientists are turning to a combination of data collected from the air, land, and space to get a more complete picture of how climate change is affecting the planet’s frozen regions. Trapped within ...
Microbes living in tree bark consume vast amounts of climate-related and toxic gases, according to new research published Jan ...
The human gut microbiome is complex and diverse, with significant implications for health and disease. The study develops smRandom-seq2, a droplet-based method that overcomes the limitations of ...
Tiny, gas-eating microbes hidden in the bark of trees offer scientists a crucial clue in the fight against global warming.
Researchers changed the composition of the gut microbiota in male mice through common antibiotics, inducing a condition called dysbiosis, and found that: - Mouse pups sired by a dysbiotic father show ...
Trees are known for absorbing CO2. But microbes in their bark also absorb other climate-active gases, methane, hydrogen, and ...
A pioneering study provides new evidence that gut microbes vary across primate species and can shape physiology in ways ...