The understanding of ocean mechanisms in the Arctic is currently experiencing a real turning point. Research conducted by the ...
The discovery of non-cyanobacteria diazotrophs underneath Arctic sea ice could change our understanding of the food web, as ...
Melting Arctic ice enables nitrogen-fixing microbes to feed algae and absorb carbon, challenging old climate views.
Researchers found that the fringes of Arctic sea ice tend to host more nitrogen-fixing bacteria and higher nitrogen-fixing ...
As the Arctic Ocean loses its sea ice due to climate change, sunlight penetrates deeper into the water and encourages the ...
Nitrogen is vital for all known life. Yet most nitrogen on Earth is in the atmosphere as di-nitrogen gas, which many organisms can’t use. Fortunately, there are microbes that can tap into this ...
The marine nitrogen cycle is crucial to sustaining ocean productivity, with biological nitrogen fixation representing a primary mechanism by which inert atmospheric nitrogen is converted into ...
Melting Arctic sea ice can be a driving force behind a process called nitrogen fixation, where atmospheric nitrogen can be ...
It has puzzled scientists for years whether and how bacteria, that live from dissolved organic matter in marine waters, can carry out N 2 fixation. It was assumed that the high levels of oxygen ...
By the beginning of June this year, approximately 38 million tons of Sargassum drifted towards the coasts of the Caribbean ...
Most organisms require nitrogen to produce biological molecules, such as nucleotides and amino acids, but until recently, only prokaryotes were known to fix nitrogen from the atmosphere. “It’s a very ...