Search Results - "Lerch, T.Z."

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  1. 1

    Sensitivity of soil microbial catabolic profiles to a gradient of carbon inputs: Does the soil organic matter matter? by Lerch, T.Z., Coucheney, E., Herrmann, A.M.

    Published in Soil biology & biochemistry (01-02-2013)
    “…The development of the MicroResp™ approach (Campbell et al., 2003) has allowed large-scale monitoring of community-level physiological profiles (CLPP). Here,…”
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    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Dynamics of bacterial communities in relation to soil aggregate formation during the decomposition of 13C-labelled rice straw by Blaud, A., Lerch, T.Z., Chevallier, T., Nunan, N., Chenu, C., Brauman, A.

    “…► Rapid formation of soil macroaggregates. ► Rapid change in soil bacterial community structure. ► Close relationship between bacterial community structure and…”
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  3. 3

    Ageing processes and soil microbial community effects on the biodegradation of soil 13C-2,4-D nonextractable residues by Lerch, T.Z., Dignac, M.-F., Nunan, N., Barriuso, E., Mariotti, A.

    Published in Environmental pollution (1987) (2009)
    “…The biodegradation of nonextractable residues (NER) of pesticides in soil is still poorly understood. The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of…”
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  4. 4

    Cascading effects of elevated ozone on wheat rhizosphere microbial communities depend on temperature and cultivar sensitivity by Changey, F., Bagard, M., Souleymane, M., Lerch, T.Z.

    Published in Environmental pollution (1987) (01-11-2018)
    “…Tropospheric ozone (O3) concentrations have now reached levels that can potentially affect crop production in several regions of the world. The interacting…”
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  5. 5

    Introduction of earthworms into constructed soils has long-lasting effects on primary production by Araujo, J.H.R., Mikajlo, I., Lerch, T.Z.

    Published in European journal of soil biology (01-09-2023)
    “…Earthworm inoculation is a successful practice to restore degraded soils. Recently, it has also been used to improve the fertility of Technosols constructed…”
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  6. 6

    Chemical changes during composting of plant residues reduce their mineralisation in soil and cancel the priming effect by Lerch, T.Z., Dignac, M.F., Thevenot, M., Mchergui, C., Houot, S.

    Published in Soil biology & biochemistry (01-09-2019)
    “…Applying composts is useful for increasing soil carbon (C) stocks and improving agricultural productivity. In order to understand the effects of composts on…”
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  7. 7

    Metabolising old soil carbon: Simply a matter of simple organic matter? by Nunan, N., Lerch, T.Z., Pouteau, V., Mora, P., Changey, F., Kätterer, T., Giusti-Miller, S., Herrmann, A.M.

    Published in Soil biology & biochemistry (01-09-2015)
    “…Bare fallow soils that have been deprived of fresh carbon inputs for prolonged periods contain mostly old, stable organic carbon. In order to shed light on the…”
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  8. 8

    Coastal environments shape chemical and microbial properties of forest litters in the Circum‐Mediterranean region by Borsali, Amine Habib, Lerch, Thomas Z., Besbes, Rania, Gros, Raphaël, Laffont‐Schwob, Isabelle, Boudenne, Jean‐Luc, Ziarelli, Fabio, Pando, Anne, Farnet Da Silva, Anne Marie

    Published in European journal of soil science (01-03-2021)
    “…This study explores how chemical and microbial properties of litters can be affected by coastal environments across the Mediterranean basin. A litterbag…”
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  9. 9
  10. 10

    Tracing 2,4-D metabolism in Cupriavidus necator JMP134 with 13C-labelling technique and fatty acid profiling by Lerch, T.Z., Dignac, M.-F., Barriuso, E., Bardoux, G., Mariotti, A.

    Published in Journal of microbiological methods (01-11-2007)
    “…The use of stable isotope probing of fatty acid methyl esters (FAME–SIP) is a powerful tool to study the microorganisms involved in xenobiotic biodegradation…”
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