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Eveline J. Krab
Researcher at Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Publications - 33
Citations - 731
Eveline J. Krab is an academic researcher from Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tundra & Biology. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 24 publications receiving 459 citations. Previous affiliations of Eveline J. Krab include Umeå University & VU University Amsterdam.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Detecting macroecological patterns in bacterial communities across independent studies of global soils.
Kelly S. Ramirez,Christopher Knight,Mattias de Hollander,Francis Q. Brearley,Bede Constantinides,Anne Cotton,Si Creer,Thomas W. Crowther,John Davison,Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo,Ellen Dorrepaal,David Elliott,David Elliott,Graeme Fox,Robert I. Griffiths,Chris C. Hale,Kyle Hartman,Ashley Houlden,David L. Jones,Eveline J. Krab,Fernando T. Maestre,Krista L. McGuire,Sylvain Monteux,Caroline Orr,Wim H. van der Putten,Ian Roberts,David A. Robinson,Jennifer D. Rocca,Jennifer K. Rowntree,Klaus Schlaeppi,Matthew Shepherd,Brajesh K. Singh,Angela L. Straathof,Jennifer M. Bhatnagar,Cécile Thion,Marcel G. A. van der Heijden,Marcel G. A. van der Heijden,Franciska T. de Vries +37 more
TL;DR: Combining data from independent studies can be used to explore bacterial community dynamics, identify potential ‘indicator’ taxa with an important role in structuring communities, and propose hypotheses on the factors that shape bacterial biogeography that have been overlooked in the past.
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Turning northern peatlands upside down: disentangling microclimate and substrate quality effects on vertical distribution of Collembola
TL;DR: The results not only demonstrate that springtail species differ in their responses to changes in climate or substrate quality; they also suggest that interspecific faunal trait variation may provide a useful tool to predict animal responses to climatic changes.
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Traits underpinning desiccation resistance explain distribution patterns of terrestrial isopods
André T. C. Dias,Eveline J. Krab,Janine Mariën,Martin Zimmer,Johannes H. C. Cornelissen,Jacintha Ellers,David A. Wardle,Matty P. Berg +7 more
TL;DR: It is shown that it is possible to use functional traits measured under standard conditions to predict soil biota responses to water availability in the field over broad spatial scales, and that soil moisture determines isopod species distributions by filtering them according to traits underpinning desiccation resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI
Carbon loss from northern circumpolar permafrost soils amplified by rhizosphere priming
Frida Keuper,Birgit Wild,Birgit Wild,Matti Kummu,Christian Beer,Gesche Blume-Werry,Gesche Blume-Werry,Sébastien Fontaine,Konstantin Gavazov,Konstantin Gavazov,Norman Gentsch,Georg Guggenberger,Georg Guggenberger,Gustaf Hugelius,Mika Jalava,Charles D. Koven,Eveline J. Krab,Eveline J. Krab,Peter Kuhry,Sylvain Monteux,Andreas Richter,Andreas Richter,Tanvir Shahzad,James T. Weedon,Ellen Dorrepaal +24 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine high-resolution spatial and depth-resolved datasets of key plant and permafrost properties with empirical relationships of priming effects from living plants on microbial respiration.
Journal ArticleDOI
Carbon and nitrogen cycling in Yedoma permafrost controlled by microbial functional limitations
Sylvain Monteux,Sylvain Monteux,Frida Keuper,Sébastien Fontaine,Konstantin Gavazov,Konstantin Gavazov,Sara Hallin,Jaanis Juhanson,Eveline J. Krab,Eveline J. Krab,Sandrine Revaillot,Erik Verbruggen,Josefine Walz,James T. Weedon,James T. Weedon,Ellen Dorrepaal +15 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that biogeochemical processes in permafrost can be impaired by missing functions in the microbial community, probably due to environmental filtering of the microbial communities over millennia-long freezing.