Will’s manuscript, based on his thesis work, was accepted last month and has now been published online in Microbial Ecology. It is titled “Microbial Community Functional Potential and Composition Are Shaped by Hydrologic Connectivity in Riverine Floodplain Soils” and can be found at doi.org/10.1007/s00248-016-0883-9. Congrats to Will!
Author: Zaklab
Congrats Zac
Zac Freedman’s manuscript in PLOS ONE, titled “Microbial Potential for Ecosystem N Loss Is Increased by Experimental N Deposition” was accepted recently. It’s out online at doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164531. Congrats to Zac!
Congrats to Dr. Elizabeth Entwistle
Congratulations to Elizabeth Entwistle who successfully defended her dissertation, Anthropogenic Nitrogen Deposition and Decomposer Fungi: Altered Composition and Function Fosters Greater Soil Carbon Storage. Also congrats to her committee: Don Zak (chair), Ines Ibáñez, Tim James and Greg Dick. Elizabeth has also accepted and begun work as a post-doc at the University of Alabama at Birmingham under...
Congrats Lauren!
Congratulation to Dr. Lauren Cline for receiving a 2015 Distinguished Dissertation Awards from Rackham Graduate School. Lauren is one of only ten recipients from the University of Michigan to receive this honor for their 2015 dissertations. She stopped by to celebrate and receive the award and we were all super excited to see her.
Congrats Don!
Don Zak’s manuscript in Global Change Biology, titled “Anthropogenic N Deposition Increases Soil Organic Matter Accumulation Without Altering Its Biochemical Composition” was accepted in August. It’s already out online (manuscript format but regular coming soon) at http://dx.doi.org/0.1111/gcb.13480. Congrats to Don!
Karl’s Paper is Out
Karl Romanowicz’s manuscript on what shapes the active and total communities in forest floor, titled “Active microorganisms in forest soils differ from the total community yet are shaped by the same environmental factors: the influence of pH and soil moisture,” was accepted and is out now in FEMS Microbiology Ecology. The link for the paper...
Congrats Zac!
Dr. Zac Freedman has recently made the move to Assistant Professor at West Virginia University in Plant and Soil Sciences. If you would like to contact him, his new email is zachary.freedman@mail.wvu.edu. His website is http://community.wvu.edu/~zbf0001/Home.html if you would like to see what lab opportunities he has available. We will miss him, but wish him well in his new...
Unseen Partners: Manipulating Microbial Communities that Support Life on Earth
There is a free Michigan Meeting event happening May 16th – 18th in Ann Arbor called: Unseen Partners: Manipulating Microbial Communities that Support Life on Earth. The goal of this meeting is to bring together environmental and health scientists for “presentations from local, national, and international speakers will help identify the underlying principles of microbial...
Zac’s Paper Accepted
Zac Freedman’s manuscript on the Gradient metagenome “Anthropogenic N Deposition Slows Decay by Favoring Bacterial Metabolism: Insights from Metagenomic Analyses” was accepted into Frontiers in Microbiology. It’s out online at this link: http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2016.00259/full. Congrats Zac!