Publications by authors named "E Jardine"

Increasing extreme climatic events threaten the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems. Because soil microbes govern key biogeochemical processes, understanding their response to climate extremes is crucial in predicting the consequences for ecosystem functioning. Here we subjected soils from 30 grasslands across Europe to four contrasting extreme climatic events under common controlled conditions (drought, flood, freezing and heat), and compared the response of soil microbial communities and their functioning with those of undisturbed soils.

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Background: Both legal and extra-legal factors influence judicial and non-judicial opinions about persons who use drugs. Yet, how the locational setting of drug transactions influences public perceptions of drug control policies remains understudied. In particular, the public's view of drug exchanges on the dark web could directly and indirectly influence drug policy, legal decision making, and spending decisions.

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Gram-negative bacteria are intrinsically resistant to a plethora of antibiotics that effectively inhibit the growth of Gram-positive bacteria. The intrinsic resistance of Gram-negative bacteria to classes of antibiotics, including rifamycins, aminocoumarins, macrolides, glycopeptides, and oxazolidinones, has largely been attributed to their lack of accumulation within cells due to poor permeability across the outer membrane, susceptibility to efflux pumps, or a combination of these factors. Due to the difficulty in discovering antibiotics that can bypass these barriers, finding targets and compounds that increase the activity of these ineffective antibiotics against Gram-negative bacteria has the potential to expand the antibiotic spectrum.

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Species distributions are closely associated with moisture availability, but the underlying mechanisms remain unresolved. Drought relations are especially important for plants such as C grasses that dominate seasonally dry ecosystems. Here, we test the hypothesis that C grass species sampled across global precipitation gradients show variation in survival under drought that can be explained by their traits.

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