Anti-Therapeutic Action: ecosystem damage

Exploring functional microbiota for uranium sequestration in Zoige uranium mine soil

Researchers studied bacteria in uranium-contaminated soil from a mine in China to find microorganisms that could help clean up the pollution. They discovered that three types of bacteria—Actinobacteria, Firmicutes, and Cyanobacteria—are particularly good at binding uranium and could be used for natural soil remediation. These bacteria survive in the contaminated environment by producing amino acids and fatty acids that help them deal with uranium stress.

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Metagenomic Analysis: Alterations of Soil Microbial Community and Function due to the Disturbance of Collecting Cordyceps sinensis

This research examines how harvesting Cordyceps sinensis (a valuable medicinal fungus) affects the soil’s microscopic organisms on the Tibetan Plateau. While collection doesn’t reduce the total number of microbes, it significantly changes which types live in the soil and how they function. The study found that collection alters important soil processes related to carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycling, suggesting that harvesting practices need to balance economic benefits with environmental health.

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