𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Psychrophiles: from Biodiversity to Biotechnology Volume 1006 || Biotechnological Aspects of Cold-Adapted Enzymes

✍ Scribed by Margesin, Rosa; Schinner, Franz; Marx, Jean-Claude; Gerday, Charles


Book ID
111871088
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Year
2008
Tongue
German
Weight
134 KB
Edition
2008
Category
Article
ISBN
3540743359

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Most scientists in the middle of the twentieth century would probably not have believed that life was possible at extreme values of environmental factors, such as pH values close to 0 (e. g. sulfurous environments) or to 14 (e. g. soda lakes), sali- ties of 6 M NaCl (e. g. Dead Sea), hydrostatic pressures approaching 0. 1 MPa (deep sea) and temperatures exceeding 100Β°C (thermal vents or hot springs) or as low as –20Β°C (e. g. polar regions). Of the current studies on extremophiles, approximately 30,000 articles by the year 2007, almost two-thirds have been performed on org- isms adapted to outstanding temperatures, but much more attention has been paid to thermophiles than to psychrophiles. However, over the past 10 years, scientific publications on cold-adapted microorganisms have increased by a factor of ten. If one considers the extent of cold habitats, psychrophiles, i. e. cold-loving organisms, should largely lead in this comparison with thermophiles because a great proportion of the Earth’s biosphere never reaches temperatures above 5Β°C. Nearly three-quarters of the Earth is covered by oceans whose deep water masses, irrespective of latitude, are constantly between 2 and 4Β°C. The large continent of Antarctica also provides a permanently cold terrestrial environment as well as an aquatic niche in the surrounding ice that melts during the summer. Other examples of cold habitats are permafrost soils, high alpine soils, cold deserts, cold caves, marine sediments, snow, glacier and sea ice.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Psychrophiles: from Biodiversity to Biot
✍ Margesin, Rosa; Schinner, Franz; Marx, Jean-Claude; Gerday, Charles πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2008 πŸ› Springer Berlin Heidelberg 🌐 German βš– 119 KB

Most scientists in the middle of the twentieth century would probably not have believed that life was possible at extreme values of environmental factors, such as pH values close to 0 (e. g. sulfurous environments) or to 14 (e. g. soda lakes), sali- ties of 6 M NaCl (e. g. Dead Sea), hydrostatic pre

Psychrophiles: from Biodiversity to Biot
✍ Margesin, Rosa; Schinner, Franz; Marx, Jean-Claude; Gerday, Charles πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2008 πŸ› Springer Berlin Heidelberg 🌐 German βš– 96 KB

Most scientists in the middle of the twentieth century would probably not have believed that life was possible at extreme values of environmental factors, such as pH values close to 0 (e. g. sulfurous environments) or to 14 (e. g. soda lakes), sali- ties of 6 M NaCl (e. g. Dead Sea), hydrostatic pre

Psychrophiles: from Biodiversity to Biot
✍ Margesin, Rosa; Schinner, Franz; Marx, Jean-Claude; Gerday, Charles πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2008 πŸ› Springer Berlin Heidelberg 🌐 German βš– 118 KB

Most scientists in the middle of the twentieth century would probably not have believed that life was possible at extreme values of environmental factors, such as pH values close to 0 (e. g. sulfurous environments) or to 14 (e. g. soda lakes), sali- ties of 6 M NaCl (e. g. Dead Sea), hydrostatic pre