Forest microbiome: diversity, complexity and dynamics
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Abstract
Globally, forests represent highly productive ecosystems that act as carbon sinks where soil organic matter is formed from residuals after biomass decomposition as well as from rhizodeposited carbon. Forests exhibit a high level of spatial heterogeneity and the importance of trees, the dominant primary producers, for their structure and functioning. Fungi, bacteria and archaea inhabit various forest habitats: foliage, the wood of living trees, the bark surface, ground vegetation, roots and the rhizosphere, litter, soil, deadwood, rock surfaces, invertebrates, wetlands or the atmosphere, each of which has its own specific features, such as nutrient availability or temporal dynamicy and specific drivers that…
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712
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- 78.51
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Microbiome
- Biology
- Diversity (politics)
- Evolutionary biology
- Dynamics (music)
- Ecology
- Computational biology
- Bioinformatics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Life in Land
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