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Yi Dong

Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publications -  21
Citations -  225

Yi Dong is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plankton & Tintinnid. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 17 publications receiving 148 citations. Previous affiliations of Yi Dong include Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Structures of bacterial communities on the surface of Ulva prolifera and in seawaters in an Ulva blooming region in Jiaozhou Bay, China

TL;DR: In insight into the changes in the bacterial community composition in seawater in blooming region during the course of macroalgal Ulva bloom, some specific dominant bacterial assemblages were present in some seawater samples.
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Bacterial and archaeal community structures in the Arctic deep-sea sediment

TL;DR: The microbial diversity in the Arctic deep marine sediment (>3 500 m) near the North Pole is described and would lay foundation for future functional analysis on microbial metabolic processes and pathways predictions in similar environments.
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The detection of magnetotactic bacteria in deep sea sediments from the east Pacific Manganese Nodule Province.

TL;DR: The data suggest that diverse putative MTB are widely distributed in deep sea surface sediments from the east Pacific Manganese Nodule Province, and Interestingly, OTU759 was widely distributed, occurring at all study sites.
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Bacterial diversity and community structure in the East China Sea by 454 sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene

TL;DR: It was found that different water masses in the sampling areas may have had some influence on the bacterial community structure, and seawater samples in different areas and at different depths were affected by different environmental parameters.
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Planktonic ciliates in different water masses in open waters near Prydz Bay (East Antarctica) during austral summer, with an emphasis on tintinnid assemblages

TL;DR: The characteristics of ciliate assemblages in different water masses in open waters near Prydz Bay (East Antarctica) during austral summer will help predict the spatial and temporal variations of ciliates and other plankton according to the dynamics ofWater masses in Antarctic waters.