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1. Haloalkane-Utilizing Rhodococcus Strains Isolated from Geographically Distinct Locations Possess a Highly Conserved Gene Cluster Encoding Haloalkane Catabolism

2. Deep sub-seafloor prokaryotes stimulated at interfaces over geological time RID B-1731-2010 RID A-1877-2008 RID D-2690-2009 RID A-2970-2010

3. Evaluation of wastewater surveillance for SARS-CoV-2 in a prison population: a mixed-methods approach.

4. Implications of long-term sample storage on the recovery of viruses from wastewater and biobanking.

5. Wastewater sample storage for physicochemical and microbiological analysis.

6. National-scale antimicrobial resistance surveillance in wastewater: A comparative analysis of HT qPCR and metagenomic approaches.

7. Examining the stability of viral RNA and DNA in wastewater: Effects of storage time, temperature, and freeze-thaw cycles.

8. Use of wastewater from passenger ships to assess the movement of COVID-19 and other pathogenic viruses across maritime international boundaries.

9. Simultaneous detection and characterization of common respiratory pathogens in wastewater through genomic sequencing.

10. Microbial community and antimicrobial resistance niche differentiation in a multistage, surface flow constructed wetland.

11. Comparative assessment of Nanotrap and polyethylene glycol-based virus concentration in wastewater samples.

12. Monitoring SARS-CoV-2 Using Infoveillance, National Reporting Data, and Wastewater in Wales, United Kingdom: Mixed Methods Study.

13. Sphingopyxis Species Isolated from Sand Filter Biofilm at an Australian Drinking Water Treatment Works.

14. Methanogen activity and microbial diversity in Gulf of Cádiz mud volcano sediments.

15. Microplastic biofilm, associated pathogen and antimicrobial resistance dynamics through a wastewater treatment process incorporating a constructed wetland.

16. Biostimulation of jarosite and iron oxide-bearing mine waste enhances subsequent metal recovery.

17. Poor air passenger knowledge of COVID-19 symptoms and behaviour undermines strategies aimed at preventing the import of SARS-CoV-2 into the UK.

18. Suitability of aircraft wastewater for pathogen detection and public health surveillance.

19. Towards passive bioremediation of dye-bearing effluents using hydrous ferric oxide wastes: Mechanisms, products and microbiology.

20. Impact of flow hydrodynamics and pipe material properties on biofilm development within drinking water systems.

21. Not all Pseudomonas aeruginosa are equal: strains from industrial sources possess uniquely large multireplicon genomes.

22. Presence of Mycobacterium avium Subspecies paratuberculosis Monitored Over Varying Temporal and Spatial Scales in River Catchments: Persistent Routes for Human Exposure.

23. Genome Sequences of Two Choline-Utilizing Methanogenic Archaea, Methanococcoides spp., Isolated from Marine Sediments.

24. Rock-crushing derived hydrogen directly supports a methanogenic community: significance for the deep biosphere.

25. Highly competitive fungi manipulate bacterial communities in decomposing beech wood (Fagus sylvatica).

26. Bacteria in decomposing wood and their interactions with wood-decay fungi.

27. Phylogeny and physiology of candidate phylum 'Atribacteria' (OP9/JS1) inferred from cultivation-independent genomics.

28. Chronic effects of temperature and nitrate pollution on Daphnia magna: Is this cladoceran suitable for widespread use as a tertiary treatment?

29. Complex coupled metabolic and prokaryotic community responses to increasing temperatures in anaerobic marine sediments: critical temperatures and substrate changes.

30. The effect of anthropogenic arsenic contamination on the earthworm microbiome.

31. Survival of Desulfotomaculum spores from estuarine sediments after serial autoclaving and high-temperature exposure.

32. Archaeal community diversity and abundance changes along a natural salinity gradient in estuarine sediments.

33. Arabidopsis thaliana and Pisum sativum models demonstrate that root colonization is an intrinsic trait of Burkholderia cepacia complex bacteria.

34. Contrasting relationships between biogeochemistry and prokaryotic diversity depth profiles along an estuarine sediment gradient.

35. Dynamic microbial community associated with iron-arsenic co-precipitation products from a groundwater storage system in Bangladesh.

36. Enrichment and cultivation of prokaryotes associated with the sulphate-methane transition zone of diffusion-controlled sediments of Aarhus Bay, Denmark, under heterotrophic conditions.

37. Culture-independent analysis of bacterial fuel contamination provides insight into the level of concordance with the standard industry practice of aerobic cultivation.

38. Microbial diversity in Frenulata (Siboglinidae, Polychaeta) species from mud volcanoes in the Gulf of Cadiz (NE Atlantic).

39. Chemosynthetic bacteria found in bivalve species from mud volcanoes of the Gulf of Cadiz.

40. Prokaryotic functional diversity in different biogeochemical depth zones in tidal sediments of the Severn Estuary, UK, revealed by stable-isotope probing.

41. Diversity of gut microbiota increases with aging and starvation in the desert locust.

42. Culturable prokaryotic diversity of deep, gas hydrate sediments: first use of a continuous high-pressure, anaerobic, enrichment and isolation system for subseafloor sediments (DeepIsoBUG).

43. Subsurface microbiology and biogeochemistry of a deep, cold-water carbonate mound from the Porcupine Seabight (IODP Expedition 307).

44. Modified linker-PCR primers facilitate complete sequencing of DGGE DNA fragments.

45. Prokaryotic biodiversity and activity in the deep subseafloor biosphere.

46. Purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of DehI, a group I alpha-haloacid dehalogenase from Pseudomonas putida strain PP3.

47. The crystal structure of DehI reveals a new alpha-haloacid dehalogenase fold and active-site mechanism.

48. Composition of Acridid gut bacterial communities as revealed by 16S rRNA gene analysis.

49. Distribution of candidate division JS1 and other Bacteria in tidal sediments of the German Wadden Sea using targeted 16S rRNA gene PCR-DGGE.

50. Biogeochemistry and biodiversity of methane cycling in subsurface marine sediments (Skagerrak, Denmark).

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