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      The food web perspective on aquatic biofilms

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          The ecology and biogeochemistry of stream biofilms.

          Streams and rivers form dense networks, shape the Earth's surface and, in their sediments, provide an immensely large surface area for microbial growth. Biofilms dominate microbial life in streams and rivers, drive crucial ecosystem processes and contribute substantially to global biogeochemical fluxes. In turn, water flow and related deliveries of nutrients and organic matter to biofilms constitute major constraints on microbial life. In this Review, we describe the ecology and biogeochemistry of stream biofilms and highlight the influence of physical and ecological processes on their structure and function. Recent advances in the study of biofilm ecology may pave the way towards a mechanistic understanding of the effects of climate and environmental change on stream biofilms and the biogeochemistry of stream ecosystems.
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            Estimating the grazing impact of marine micro-zooplankton

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              Off the hook--how bacteria survive protozoan grazing.

              Bacterial growth and survival in numerous environments are constrained by the action of bacteria-consuming protozoa. Recent findings suggest that bacterial adaptations against protozoan predation might have a significant role in bacterial persistence and diversification. We argue that selective predation has given rise to diverse routes of bacterial defense, including adaptive mechanisms in bacterial biofilms, and has promoted major transitions in bacterial evolution, such as multicellularity and pathogenesis. We propose that studying predation-driven adaptations will provide an exciting frontier for microbial ecology and evolution at the interface of prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecological Monographs
                Ecol Monogr
                Wiley
                00129615
                June 25 2018
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department River Ecology; Helmholtz Centre of Environmental Research - UFZ; Brückstrasse 3a 39114 Magdeburg Germany
                [2 ]Department of Animal Ecology; University of Bielefeld; Konsequenz 45 33615 Bielefeld Germany
                [3 ]General Ecology; Zoological Institute; Cologne Biocenter; University of Cologne; Zülpicher Strasse 47b 50674 Cologne Germany
                [4 ]Department Aquatic Ecosystem Analyses and Management; Helmholtz Centre of Environmental Research - UFZ; Brückstrasse 3a 39114 Magdeburg Germany
                [5 ]Department of Animal Ecology; Federal Institute of Hydrology; Am Mainzer Tor 1 56068 Koblenz Germany
                Article
                10.1002/ecm.1315
                9ce6dfd8-7d6c-44db-b6e3-2c9a2fbfe68d
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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