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Daniel P. R. Herlemann

Researcher at Estonian University of Life Sciences

Publications -  35
Citations -  3169

Daniel P. R. Herlemann is an academic researcher from Estonian University of Life Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Salinity & Brackish water. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 32 publications receiving 2384 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel P. R. Herlemann include Max Planck Society & Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research.

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Transitions in bacterial communities along the 2000 km salinity gradient of the Baltic Sea

TL;DR: This study reports a first detailed bacterial inventory from vertical profiles of 60 sampling stations distributed along the salinity gradient of the Baltic Sea, one of world's largest brackish water environments, generated using 454 pyrosequencing of partial (400 bp) 16S rRNA genes.
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Metagenomic de novo assembly of an aquatic representative of the verrucomicrobial class Spartobacteria.

TL;DR: The genome and metabolic potential of the abundant Baltic Sea Spartobacteria phylotype is reconstructed by metagenomics and it is suggested that this organism may play an important role in the carbon cycle of this ecosystem.
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Particle-Associated Differ from Free-Living Bacteria in Surface Waters of the Baltic Sea

TL;DR: Findings indicate that PA bacteria significantly contribute to overall bacterial richness and that they differ from FL bacteria, which should be generally studied independently.
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The Ultramicrobacterium “Elusimicrobium minutum” gen. nov., sp. nov., the First Cultivated Representative of the Termite Group 1 Phylum

TL;DR: PCR-based screening and comparative 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis revealed that strain Pei191T belongs to the “intestinal cluster,” a lineage of hitherto uncultivated bacteria present in arthropod and mammalian gut systems.
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Genomic Analysis of “Elusimicrobium minutum,” the First Cultivated Representative of the Phylum “Elusimicrobia” (Formerly Termite Group 1)

TL;DR: Comparative analysis of 22 concatenated single-copy marker genes corroborated the status of “Elusimicrobia” (formerly TG1) as a separate phylum in the bacterial domain, which was so far based only on 16S rRNA sequence analysis.