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The book overviews the complex interactions amongst the microbes and their possible applications. Emphasis has been made to include a wide spectrum of experimental and theoretical contributions from eminent researchers in the field. Microbial communities are the assemblages of microorganisms of various species which live together in the same environment and continuously interact with each other. The microbial cells in communities display unique phenotypes that affect the survival and reproduction of other cells present around them. These phenotypes constitute the social adaptations that drive the interactions between microbial cells. The interactions, further determine the productivity, stability and the ability of community to resist the environmental perturbations. These microbial communities live with extremely competitive niche and fight for their survival and genetic persistence. But they frequently appear in niche with multifaceted and interactive webs rather than the planktonic nature. This can be within the same species or with di¿erent species, or even with diverse genera and families. It either a competitive winner community whereas the "weaker" strain goes extinct or a competitor that coexist with their metabolic secretory potentials or a separator that assigned their own community territorial niches. Sometimes, it can be neutral or tritagonist. These microbial associations within the microbiome provides the foundation for diverse forms of microbial ecology and determined the applied perspectives for agriculture, clinical and industrial sectors. This book will be useful to postgraduate students, researchers from academic as well as industry working in the field of microbial exploration with keen interest in survival factors and mechanism of their survival by various ecological and functional strategies.
Chapter 1. Synergistic interactions among microbial communities.- Chapter 2. Actinobacterial secondary metabolites from Maghrebian ecosystems: An overview of half-century of investigation.- Chapter 3.Study of potential interrelationship criteria of microorganisms for sustainable diversity .- Chapter 4. Antimicrobial Peptide and Toxin-based Mutualism: Obligate Symbiotic Entomopathogenic Nematode - Bacterium Associations .- Chapter 5. ¿Microbial abundance and strategies of adaptation in various extreme environments .- Chapter 6. Bacterial Community Composition Dynamics in Rice Rhizosphere: A Metagenomic Approaches.- Chapter 7. Diversity and application of heavy-metal resistant microbes.- Chapter 8. Microbial Syntrophy mediated fortification for eco-enterprising .- Chapter 9.Lichen microbiome: diversity biological role and biotechnological application.- Chapter 10.Antagonists and antibiosis: Game-changer of agriculture and health sector.- Chapter 11. Role of quorum sensing in the survival of rhizospheric microbes .- Chapter 12. Understanding the link between the urinary microbiome and urinary lithiasis disease .- Chapter 13. Understanding of gut microbial ecology for new therapeutics .- Chapter 14. Ecology and abundance of benzoate degrading bacteria in industrial waste .- Chapter 15. Metallotolerant microorganisms and microbe-assisted phytoremediation for a sustainable clean environment .- Chapter 16. Actinobacterial abundance and interrelationships in ecosystems of Northwest Africa.
Show moreThe book overviews the complex interactions amongst the microbes and their possible applications. Emphasis has been made to include a wide spectrum of experimental and theoretical contributions from eminent researchers in the field. Microbial communities are the assemblages of microorganisms of various species which live together in the same environment and continuously interact with each other. The microbial cells in communities display unique phenotypes that affect the survival and reproduction of other cells present around them. These phenotypes constitute the social adaptations that drive the interactions between microbial cells. The interactions, further determine the productivity, stability and the ability of community to resist the environmental perturbations. These microbial communities live with extremely competitive niche and fight for their survival and genetic persistence. But they frequently appear in niche with multifaceted and interactive webs rather than the planktonic nature. This can be within the same species or with di¿erent species, or even with diverse genera and families. It either a competitive winner community whereas the "weaker" strain goes extinct or a competitor that coexist with their metabolic secretory potentials or a separator that assigned their own community territorial niches. Sometimes, it can be neutral or tritagonist. These microbial associations within the microbiome provides the foundation for diverse forms of microbial ecology and determined the applied perspectives for agriculture, clinical and industrial sectors. This book will be useful to postgraduate students, researchers from academic as well as industry working in the field of microbial exploration with keen interest in survival factors and mechanism of their survival by various ecological and functional strategies.
Chapter 1. Synergistic interactions among microbial communities.- Chapter 2. Actinobacterial secondary metabolites from Maghrebian ecosystems: An overview of half-century of investigation.- Chapter 3.Study of potential interrelationship criteria of microorganisms for sustainable diversity .- Chapter 4. Antimicrobial Peptide and Toxin-based Mutualism: Obligate Symbiotic Entomopathogenic Nematode - Bacterium Associations .- Chapter 5. ¿Microbial abundance and strategies of adaptation in various extreme environments .- Chapter 6. Bacterial Community Composition Dynamics in Rice Rhizosphere: A Metagenomic Approaches.- Chapter 7. Diversity and application of heavy-metal resistant microbes.- Chapter 8. Microbial Syntrophy mediated fortification for eco-enterprising .- Chapter 9.Lichen microbiome: diversity biological role and biotechnological application.- Chapter 10.Antagonists and antibiosis: Game-changer of agriculture and health sector.- Chapter 11. Role of quorum sensing in the survival of rhizospheric microbes .- Chapter 12. Understanding the link between the urinary microbiome and urinary lithiasis disease .- Chapter 13. Understanding of gut microbial ecology for new therapeutics .- Chapter 14. Ecology and abundance of benzoate degrading bacteria in industrial waste .- Chapter 15. Metallotolerant microorganisms and microbe-assisted phytoremediation for a sustainable clean environment .- Chapter 16. Actinobacterial abundance and interrelationships in ecosystems of Northwest Africa.
Show moreChapter 1. Synergistic interactions among microbial communities.- Chapter 2. Actinobacterial secondary metabolites from Maghrebian ecosystems: An overview of half-century of investigation.- Chapter 3.Study of potential interrelationship criteria of microorganisms for sustainable diversity .- Chapter 4. Antimicrobial Peptide and Toxin-based Mutualism: Obligate Symbiotic Entomopathogenic Nematode – Bacterium Associations .- Chapter 5. Microbial abundance and strategies of adaptation in various extreme environments .- Chapter 6. Bacterial Community Composition Dynamics in Rice Rhizosphere: A Metagenomic Approaches.- Chapter 7. Diversity and application of heavy-metal resistant microbes.- Chapter 8. Microbial Syntrophy mediated fortification for eco-enterprising .- Chapter 9.Lichen microbiome: diversity biological role and biotechnological application.- Chapter 10.Antagonists and antibiosis: Game-changer of agriculture and health sector.- Chapter 11. Role of quorum sensing in thesurvival of rhizospheric microbes .- Chapter 12. Understanding the link between the urinary microbiome and urinary lithiasis disease .- Chapter 13. Understanding of gut microbial ecology for new therapeutics .- Chapter 14. Ecology and abundance of benzoate degrading bacteria in industrial waste .- Chapter 15. Metallotolerant microorganisms and microbe-assisted phytoremediation for a sustainable clean environment .- Chapter 16. Actinobacterial abundance and interrelationships in ecosystems of Northwest Africa.
Dr. Raghvendra Pratap Singh is an eminent scientist in
Microbial Biotechnology. He has received his Ph.D. from Gurukul
Kangri University, India, and is presently working in the Research
and Development Division of Uttaranchal University, Dehradun. His
research contributions relate to the area of plant-microbe
interaction and microbial genomics. He is a member of the Aquatic
Biodiversity Society and also has a certification from the Food and
Drug Association of India. He has received several awards from
various scientific agencies and societies such as the Young
Scientist award by ABA-2017, SERB-DST grant, Chinese Postdoctoral
Grant, DBT travel grant, etc. He has participated as Speaker in
several National and International scientific meets and conferences
such as FEMS, Myxo-2016, AMI, PTPB-2014. Dr. Singh has
actively contributed sundry international research articles, book
chapters, general articles, etc. in various microbiology and
biotechnology journals and 2patents. He has deposited more than 400
gene sequences, 6 WGS, and 3 metagenomes at NCBI. He has also
authored 6 books, including a prestigious textbook that was
published by the Indian Council of Agriculture Research, Government
of India.
Dr. Geetanjali Manchanda is working as Head of the
Botany Department in DAV University, Jalandhar, India. She received
an M.Sc. degree from Delhi University and Ph.D. from Panjab
University, Chandigarh. She has extensively worked on plant-microbe
interactions in stressed and contaminated environments with a
special focus on mycorrhizae for the fortification of various
crops. She has received prestigious research grants from DST,
India, and IFS Sweden. She has contributed immensely to the
scientific community by publishing research papers and book
chapters. She had recently authored a book on the use of omics
technology for microbiology that has been published by ICAR, New
Delhi, India.
Dr. Kaushik Bhattacharjee earned his Doctor of Philosophy
(Ph.D.) from the North-Eastern Hill University of India in the
Microbiology Laboratory by researching the inter-disciplinary field
of Microbial diversity from extreme
environments, Pharmaceutical microbiology, and Medicinal
chemistry. He took his post-doctoral training at the Department of
Botany, North-Eastern Hill University of India, and IASST,
Guwahati, India. He has so far contributed over 20 publications in
refereed journals of high repute and published about half a
dozen of book chapters. He also serves as an editorial board member
and invited journal reviewers for many highly reputed journals from
publishing groups like Springer Nature, Elsevier, PLoS, Taylor
& Francis, etc. He has been awarded the Outstanding Reviewer Award
from Elsevier for the year 2018. He also serves as a Certified
Mentor at Publons Academy, Clarivate Analytics, United
States. His broad area of research Interests includes Environmental
Microbiologyand Pharmaceutical microbiology.
Prof. Hovik Panosyan graduated in Biology from Yerevan State
University (YSU) in 1999. He received his Ph.D. in microbiology
from the Institute of Botany of NAS of Armenia in 2003. He has been
a faculty member at YSU since 2002 and was promoted to Associate
Professor in 2011. His main research area is Microbial Ecology and
the Biology of Extremophilic Microbes. He has been awarded numerous
research fellowships and awards including FEBS Short-Term
Fellowship (2009 and 2004), FEMS Research Fellowship (2009), NFSAT
(2011) DAAD (2013) and has participated in international research
together with USA, European and Asian partners. He is currently the
coordinator and leader of international research and educational
programs, as well as ISME ambassador of Armenia. He had work
experience at the University of Bergen (Norway), LMU Munich
(Germany), University of Nevada, Las Vegas (USA), and Institute of
Biomolecular Chemistry Naples (Italy). HovikPanosyan is actively
engaged in studying the microbial community of extreme environments
(terrestrial geothermal springs, alkali-saline soils, subterranean
salt deposits, copper and molybdenum mines distributed on the
territory of Armenia) based on culture-dependent and molecular
techniques. He has published more than 60 research papers in
peer-reviewed journals, 4 books, and 25 chapters.
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