Tuesday, August 5, 2008: 3:00 PM
102 C, Midwest Airlines Center
Background/Question/Methods While our understanding of the ecology of viruses in planktonic marine systems has expanded over the past 2 decades, research into the role of viruses in freshwater systems lags well behind. In marine environments, the role of viruses as regulators of carbon and nutrient recycling as well as microbial community structure has been a focus of numerous labs, yet in freshwater the role of viruses in biogeochemical cycles remains largely unstudied. Recent data from virus production assays suggest that viruses play an equally important role in large lake biogeochemical cycles, particularly as drivers of organic-P regeneration. The application of innovative molecular approaches by marine microbial ecologists has further provided significant insight into the diversity of specific viral populations that researchers are just beginning to explore in freshwater ecosystems.
Results/Conclusions .