1don MSN
A deep-sea creature is pulling carbon from the atmosphere. Scientists didn’t know it was there.
Scientists could never square theory with data on how certain organisms fixed carbon. Turns out they were asking the wrong ...
Soils do more than store carbon from plant residues. Beneath our feet, vast communities of microbes quietly pull carbon dioxide from the air and convert it into organic matter, helping regulate ...
Soil microbes remove carbon from the atmosphere and store it underground, revealing an overlooked pathway for storage in ...
Researchers have uncovered surprising evidence that the deep ocean’s carbon-fixing engine works very differently than long ...
Researchers at the MPI for Terrestrial Microbiology have designed and constructed a new synthetic CO 2-fixation pathway, the so-called THETA cycle. “Bringing parts of the THETA cycle into living cells ...
For enhancing flavors, the production of dyes, pharmaceutical products and bio polyesters—succinic acid is a versatile platform chemical. A team led by Elke Nevoigt, Professor of Molecular ...
Rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO 2) represent an urgent global issue, with communities already experiencing more extreme weather because of a changing climate. One strategy that ...
Humanity continuously emits greenhouse gases and thereby worsens global warming. Increasing research efforts go into developing strategies to convert these gases, such as carbon dioxide (CO2), into ...
In a step toward better understanding how the ocean sequesters carbon, new findings from UC Santa Barbara researchers and collaborators challenge the current view of how carbon dioxide is “fixed” in ...
Limnology and Oceanography, Vol. 66, No. 7 (July 2021), pp. 2855-2867 (13 pages) Dinitrogen (N₂) fixation is a major source of bioavailable nitrogen to oligotrophic ocean communities. Yet, we have ...
In an effort to better understand how the ocean stores carbon, researchers at UC Santa Barbara and their collaborators have uncovered results that ...
The Cool Down on MSN
Scientists stunned after uncovering 'remarkable' discovery under Arctic ice: 'We were wrong'
"Until now, it was believed that nitrogen fixation could not take place under the sea ice because it was assumed that the ...
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