Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes
A NATO ASI on "Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes" was held at II Ciocco, Lucca, Italy from 28 August - 9 September 1994. The aims of the ASI were to evaluate the potential for molecular biology to solve some important questions in aquatic microbiology, particularly in relation to biogeochemical cycling and microbial physiology. Techniques developed by molecular biologists have now been adopted by a wide range of scientific disciplines. In the last 5 years, aquatic microbial ecologists have begun to incorporate these methods into their research and, as a result, are developing a much clearer understanding of phylogenetic diversity, the molecular basis of physiological acclimations and the transduction of environmental signals and organism responses. The aim of this ASI was to assess progress in this new field of research, to compare and describe techniques and experimental approaches, and to foster communication between disciplines. The ASI offered an excellent opportunity to bring together aquatic ecologists with molecular biologists and to encourage efficient technology transfer. The meeting of information on the status provided a forum for detailed and broad exchange and trends of aquatic molecular ecology and to assess how emerging molecular techniques might solve some important problems in ecology which have prove intractable because of lack of appropriate methodologies.
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Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes
A NATO ASI on "Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes" was held at II Ciocco, Lucca, Italy from 28 August - 9 September 1994. The aims of the ASI were to evaluate the potential for molecular biology to solve some important questions in aquatic microbiology, particularly in relation to biogeochemical cycling and microbial physiology. Techniques developed by molecular biologists have now been adopted by a wide range of scientific disciplines. In the last 5 years, aquatic microbial ecologists have begun to incorporate these methods into their research and, as a result, are developing a much clearer understanding of phylogenetic diversity, the molecular basis of physiological acclimations and the transduction of environmental signals and organism responses. The aim of this ASI was to assess progress in this new field of research, to compare and describe techniques and experimental approaches, and to foster communication between disciplines. The ASI offered an excellent opportunity to bring together aquatic ecologists with molecular biologists and to encourage efficient technology transfer. The meeting of information on the status provided a forum for detailed and broad exchange and trends of aquatic molecular ecology and to assess how emerging molecular techniques might solve some important problems in ecology which have prove intractable because of lack of appropriate methodologies.
169.99 In Stock
Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes

Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes

Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes

Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1995)

$169.99 
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Overview

A NATO ASI on "Molecular Ecology of Aquatic Microbes" was held at II Ciocco, Lucca, Italy from 28 August - 9 September 1994. The aims of the ASI were to evaluate the potential for molecular biology to solve some important questions in aquatic microbiology, particularly in relation to biogeochemical cycling and microbial physiology. Techniques developed by molecular biologists have now been adopted by a wide range of scientific disciplines. In the last 5 years, aquatic microbial ecologists have begun to incorporate these methods into their research and, as a result, are developing a much clearer understanding of phylogenetic diversity, the molecular basis of physiological acclimations and the transduction of environmental signals and organism responses. The aim of this ASI was to assess progress in this new field of research, to compare and describe techniques and experimental approaches, and to foster communication between disciplines. The ASI offered an excellent opportunity to bring together aquatic ecologists with molecular biologists and to encourage efficient technology transfer. The meeting of information on the status provided a forum for detailed and broad exchange and trends of aquatic molecular ecology and to assess how emerging molecular techniques might solve some important problems in ecology which have prove intractable because of lack of appropriate methodologies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642799259
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 12/21/2011
Series: Nato ASI Subseries G: , #38
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1995
Pages: 415
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.03(d)

Table of Contents

The Potential of Molecular Ecology.- Towards Understanding the Molecular Ecology of Phytoplankton Photosynthesis.- Bacteria in Oceanic Carbon Cycling as a Molecular Problem.- The Role and Regulation of Microbes in Sediment Nitrogen Cycle.- Functional and Taxonomic Probes for Bacteria in the Nitrogen Cycle.- The Role of Mixotrophy in Pelagic Environments.- Successional Change in the Planktonic Vegetation: Species, Structures, Scales.- Can Molecular Techniques Change Our Ideas About the Species Concept?.- How Do Cyanobacteria Perceive and Adjust to Their Environment?.- How Do Cells Express Nutrient Limitation at the Molecular Level?.- The Problem of Excess and/or Limitation of the Habitat Conditions: Do Natural Assemblages Exist?.- Signal Transduction in Microorganisms.- Microbial Diversity in Oceanic Systems: rRNA Approaches to the Study of Unculturable Microbes.- Viruses — the New Players in the Game; Their Ecological Role and Could They Mediate Genetic Exchange by Transduction?.- Molecular Analysis of Plastid Evolution.- Can We Estimate Bacterial Growth Rates from Ribosomal RNA Content?.- The Cell Cycle of Phytoplankton: Coupling Cell Growth to Population Growth.- Response of Photosynthetic Microorganisms to Changing Ambient Concentration of CO2.- Nitrogen Fixation in the Sea: Why Only Trichodesmium?.- Molecular Ecology of Marine Methanotrophs.- Microbial Cultures and Natural Populations.- List of Participants.
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