Publications by authors named "Bruno Turcq"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines the microbial diversity in sediments from Airo Lake, a floodplain lake in the Amazon, using metagenomics and biogeochemical analysis to understand the impact of the Negro River on the lake's environment.
  • - Three sediment layers were analyzed, revealing distinct microbiomes: older, deeper sediments had a higher abundance of specific bacteria like Burkholderia, while more recent layers contained different microbes like Thermococcus, indicating changes over time.
  • - A significant number of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) identified in the older strata are linked to unknown taxa, suggesting potential new species, and show enrichment in sulfur cycle genes, highlighting the complexity of microbial interactions in this ecosystem.
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Recent paleoclimatic studies suggest that changes in the tropical rainbelt across the Atlantic Ocean during the past two millennia are linked to a latitudinal shift of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) driven by the Northern Hemisphere (NH) climate. However, little is known regarding other potential drivers that can affect tropical Atlantic rainfall, mainly due to the scarcity of adequate and high-resolution records. In this study, we fill this gap by reconstructing precipitation changes in Northeastern Brazil during the last 2,300 years from a high-resolution lake record of hydrogen isotope compositions of plant waxes.

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Historians claim that European colonizers of the northern coast of Rio de Janeiro State found vast herbaceous fields when arrived in this region. Hypotheses about the origin of these fields include forest burning by the Goitacás indians and periodical floods by the Paraíba do Sul River and the lagoon system. The palynologycal analysis of two lake cores obtained in the municipality of Campos dos Goytacazes revealed opening episodes of hygrophilous forest and the establishment of field vegetation, recorded at ca.

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The Amazonian forest is, due to its great size, carbon storage capacity and present-day variability in carbon uptake and release, an important component of the global carbon cycle. Paleo-environmental reconstruction is difficult for Amazonia due to the scarcity of primary palynological data and the mis-interpretation of some secondary data. Studies of lacustrine sediment records have shown that Amazonia has known periods in which the climate was drier than it is today.

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