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30 results on '"Becraft, Eric D."'

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1. Hyperactive nanobacteria with host-dependent traits pervade Omnitrophota

2. Synthase-Selective Exploration of a Tunicate Microbiome by Activity-Guided Single-Cell Genomics

3. Hiding in Plain Sight: The Globally Distributed Bacterial Candidate Phylum PAUC34f

4. Ancestral Absence of Electron Transport Chains in Patescibacteria and DPANN

5. Author Correction: Hydrogen-based metabolism as an ancestral trait in lineages sibling to the Cyanobacteria.

6. Four Draft Single-Cell Genome Sequences of Novel, Nearly Identical Kiritimatiellaeota Strains Isolated from the Continental Deep Subsurface.

7. Hydrogen-based metabolism as an ancestral trait in lineages sibling to the Cyanobacteria.

8. Corrigendum: Minimum information about a single amplified genome (MISAG) and a metagenome-assembled genome (MIMAG) of bacteria and archaea.

9. Correction: Corrigendum: Minimum information about a single amplified genome (MISAG) and a metagenome-assembled genome (MIMAG) of bacteria and archaea

10. Minimum information about a single amplified genome (MISAG) and a metagenome-assembled genome (MIMAG) of bacteria and archaea

11. Evolutionary stasis of a deep subsurface microbial lineage

12. Rokubacteria: Genomic Giants among the Uncultured Bacterial Phyla

13. Geographic and Ecological Diversity of Green Sulfur Bacteria in Hot Spring Mat Communities.

15. Relationship between Microorganisms Inhabiting Alkaline Siliceous Hot Spring Mat Communities and Overflowing Water.

16. Ancestral Absence of Electron Transport Chains in Patescibacteria and DPANN.

17. Hiding in Plain Sight: The Globally Distributed Bacterial Candidate Phylum PAUC34f.

18. Biogeography of American Northwest Hot Spring A/B ′ -Lineage Synechococcus Populations.

19. Single-Cell-Genomics-Facilitated Read Binning of Candidate Phylum EM19 Genomes from Geothermal Spring Metagenomes.

20. The molecular dimension of microbial species: 1. Ecological distinctions among, and homogeneity within, putative ecotypes of Synechococcus inhabiting the cyanobacterial mat of Mushroom Spring, Yellowstone National Park.

21. Diel metabolomics analysis of a hot spring chlorophototrophic microbial mat leads to new hypotheses of community member metabolisms.

22. Fine-Scale Distribution Patterns of Synechococcus Ecological Diversity in Microbial Mats of Mushroom Spring, Yellowstone National Park.

23. Regulation of nif gene expression and the energetics of N2 fixation over the diel cycle in a hot spring microbial mat.

24. Microbial Community in Hyperalkaline Steel Slag-Fill Emulates Serpentinizing Springs.

25. Author Correction: Improved genome recovery and integrated cell-size analyses of individual uncultured microbial cells and viral particles.

26. Genomic Comparison of Two Family-Level Groups of the Uncultivated NAG1 Archaeal Lineage from Chemically and Geographically Disparate Hot Springs.

27. Recombination Does Not Hinder Formation or Detection of Ecological Species of Synechococcus Inhabiting a Hot Spring Cyanobacterial Mat.

28. The molecular dimension of microbial species: 2. Synechococcus strains representative of putative ecotypes inhabiting different depths in the Mushroom Spring microbial mat exhibit different adaptive and acclimative responses to light.

29. The molecular dimension of microbial species: 3. Comparative genomics of Synechococcus strains with different light responses and in situ diel transcription patterns of associated putative ecotypes in the Mushroom Spring microbial mat.

30. Diel metabolomics analysis of a hot spring chlorophototrophic microbial mat leads to new hypotheses of community member metabolisms.

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