By Ruth Kamnitzer Microbes living in tree bark consume vast amounts of climate-related and toxic gases, according to new ...
Researchers find that microbes on tree bark can alter greenhouse and toxic gases, shaping climate and air quality beyond ...
Recent research has expanded on the idea that the trees around us are far more complex than they appear. Hidden beneath bark and throughout the roots are vast communities of microbes, trillions of ...
It has been discovered that the bark of trees contains billions of tiny organisms that help purify the air and remove ...
Australian researchers have discovered a hidden climate superpower of trees. Their bark harbors trillions of microbes that ...
We all know trees are climate heroes. They pull carbon dioxide out of the air, release the oxygen we breathe, and help combat ...
Metagenomic sequencing of tree bark microbiota indicated their ability to process some atmospheric gases, highlighting their ...
Tiny, gas-eating microbes hidden in the bark of trees offer scientists a crucial clue in the fight against global warming.
The study by YSE scientists opens up new avenues for understanding tree physiology, forest ecology, and how trees are responding to climate change. There's a thriving community of diverse microbes ...
Learn how the trillions of microbes harbored in tree bark can help scrub the air of greenhouse and toxic gases.