Selected publications

October 2025
JGR Biogeosciences. - 130(2025)10, Art. e2024JG008549

From Soil to Sediment: Bedform Migration Shapes Microbial Communities From Eroding Bank Soil During Terrestrial–Aquatic Regime Shift

Anna Oprei; Insa Franzmann; José Schreckinger; Michael Mutz; Ute Risse-Buhl

The authors tested the impact of simulated ripple migration on two types of river sediment, namely aquatic sediment and incoming soil from eroding riverbanks, and compared them to stationary conditions in a microcosm experiment. Ripple migration influences community dynamics and microbial metabolism and decelerates the colonization of incoming soil from eroding riverbanks.

October 2025
Hydrological Processes. - 39(2025)10, Art. e70280

The Role of Beaver Dams in Modulating Hydrological Connectivity and Nutrient Dynamics in Agricultural Catchments With Intermittent Streams

Famin Wang; Doerthe Tetzlaff; Ji Liu; Tobias Goldhammer; Jonas Freymueller; Hauke Daempfling; Chris Soulsby

Beaver dams and associated wetlands can alter hydrological connectivity and biogeochemical processes,, but their combined influence on nutrient dynamics remains understudied. The authors investigated the effects of a network of beaver-impacted waters on macronutrients dynamics in an intermittent stream network showing the effectiveness of beaver created wetlands as nature-based solutions.

September 2025
Nature microbiology. - 10(2025), 2384–2395

A roadmap for equitable reuse of public microbiome data

Laura A. Hug; Roland Hatzenpichler; Cristina Moraru; André R. Soares; Folker Meyer; Anke Heyder; The Data Reuse Consortium; Alexander J. Probst

Science benefits from the rapid and open exchange of knowledge. However, there is a lack of appropriate community standards for data exchange between different institutions. In this article the authors discuss improvements for the exchange of extensive microbiome data.

September 2025
Nature Reviews : Earth & Environment. - 6(2025), S. 629–631

Persistent inequities in global lake science

Qingsong Jiang; Yanxin Sun; Erik Jeppesen; John P. Smol; Donald Scavia; Robert E. Hecky; Thomas Mehner; Yue Qin; Yindong Tong; Boqiang Qin; K. David Hambright; Xiaowei Jin; Jincheng Li; Kaikui Cai; Zhen Wu; Yong Liu

The study shows that, of the approximately 2,500 lakes that had been scientifically investigated by 2020, around 50 per cent were located in North America, 21 per cent in Asia, and 16 per cent in Europe. In contrast, lakes in Africa, South America and Oceania have been much less researched.

September 2025
WIREs Water. - 12(2025)5, Art. 70036

Knots in the Strings: Do Small-Scale River Features Shape Catchment-Scale Fluxes?

Ellen Wohl; Martyn Clark; Li Li; Chris Soulsby; Dörthe Tetzlaff

The authors review how river “knots” associated with bifurcations, confluences, and obstructions, which are spatially and temporally heterogeneous reaches in a river network affect reach-scale processes including flow attenuation, enhanced vertical and lateral connectivity, and augmented solute retention and uptake. .

Monitoring stations

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Last measurement: No data available.