Connections in nature: Plants, Animals, Microbes and Environments
Whether it’s a flower, a colony of ants or a coral reef, everything in nature depends on something else. On a single tree, soil fungi act as brokers between roots and nutrients; microscopic organisms and myriad chemical compounds co-exist in a single leaf; and, countless insects and other creatures live out the entirety of their lives. All of these, to one extent or another, influence the tree’s trajectory from seed to the top of the forest canopy. Our scientists look at this magic web of life, and how connections change or respond to a rapidly changing global environment.
Microbes in warm soils released more carbon than those in cooler soils
Invaders are lunch for local marine species
The queen gets to keep her daughter
Where science meets music: a banjo player listens for the songs of katydids
Amphibian skin bacteria is more diverse in cold and variable environments according to global survey