Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Walsh DA" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Eutrophication and Warming Drive Algal Community Shifts in Synchronised Time Series of Experimental Lakes Garner RE; Taranu ZE; Higgins SN; Paterson MJ; Gregory-Eaves I; Walsh DA; 40704779
BIOLOGY
2 Water Quality and Land Use Shape Bacterial Communities Across 621 Canadian Lakes Onana VE; Beisner BE; Walsh DA; 39868666
BIOLOGY
3 Vulnerability of Arctic Ocean microbial eukaryotes to sea ice loss Jackson VLN; Grevesse T; Kilias ES; Onda DFL; Young KF; Allen MJ; Walsh DA; Lovejoy C; Monier A; 39572565
BIOLOGY
4 A genome catalogue of mercury-methylating bacteria and archaea from sediments of a boreal river facing human disturbances Lawruk-Desjardins C; Storck V; Ponton DE; Amyot M; Walsh DA; 38922750
BIOLOGY
5 A multiyear time series (2004-2012) of bacterial and archaeal community dynamics in a changing Arctic Ocean Kraemer SA; Ramachandran A; Onana VE; Li WKW; Walsh DA; 38282643
BIOLOGY
6 Publisher Correction: A genome catalogue of lake bacterial diversity and its drivers at continental scale Garner RE; Kraemer SA; Onana VE; Fradette M; Varin MP; Huot Y; Walsh DA; 37821571
BIOLOGY
7 A genome catalogue of lake bacterial diversity and its drivers at continental scale Garner RE; Kraemer SA; Onana VE; Fradette M; Varin MP; Huot Y; Walsh DA; 37524802
BIOLOGY
8 Geospatial analysis reveals a hotspot of fecal bacteria in Canadian prairie lakes linked to agricultural non-point sources Oliva A; Onana VE; Garner RE; Kraemer SA; Fradette M; Walsh DA; Huot Y; 36653256
BIOLOGY
9 Degradation pathways for organic matter of terrestrial origin are widespread and expressed in Arctic Ocean microbiomes Grevesse T; Guéguen C; Onana VE; Walsh DA; 36566218
BIOLOGY
10 A resistome survey across hundreds of freshwater bacterial communities reveals the impacts of veterinary and human antibiotics use Kraemer SA; Barbosa da Costa N; Oliva A; Huot Y; Walsh DA; 36338036
BIOLOGY
11 Comparing microscopy and DNA metabarcoding techniques for identifying cyanobacteria assemblages across hundreds of lakes MacKeigan PW; Garner RE; Monchamp MÈ; Walsh DA; Onana VE; Kraemer SA; Pick FR; Beisner BE; Agbeti MD; da Costa NB; Shapiro BJ; Gregory-Eaves I; 35287928
BIOLOGY
12 Rethinking microbial infallibility in the metagenomics era O' Malley MA; Walsh DA; 34160589
BIOLOGY
13 A Novel Freshwater to Marine Evolutionary Transition Revealed within Methylophilaceae Bacteria from the Arctic Ocean Ramachandran A; McLatchie S; Walsh DA; 34154421
BIOLOGY
14 Role of organic matter and microbial communities in mercury retention and methylation in sediments near run-of-river hydroelectric dams. Millera Ferriz L, Ponton DE, Storck V, Leclerc M, Bilodeau F, Walsh DA, Amyot M 33609815
BIOLOGY
15 Sediment Metagenomes as Time Capsules of Lake Microbiomes. Garner RE; Gregory-Eaves I; Walsh DA; 33148818
BIOLOGY
16 A large-scale assessment of lakes reveals a pervasive signal of land use on bacterial communities. Kraemer SA, Barbosa da Costa N, Shapiro BJ, Fradette M, Huot Y, Walsh DA 32770118
BIOLOGY
17 Modelling Free-Living and Particle-Associated Bacterial Assemblages across the Deep and Hypoxic Lower St. Lawrence Estuary. Cui TT, Dawson TJ, McLatchie S, Dunn K, Bielawski J, Walsh DA 32434843
BIOLOGY
18 Diversity and biogeography of SAR11 bacteria from the Arctic Ocean. Kraemer S, Ramachandran A, Colatriano D, Lovejoy C, Walsh DA 31501503
BIOLOGY
19 The NSERC Canadian Lake Pulse Network: A national assessment of lake health providing science for water management in a changing climate. Huot Y, Brown CA, Potvin G, Antoniades D, Baulch HM, Beisner BE, Bélanger S, Brazeau S, Cabana H, Cardille JA, Del Giorgio PA, Gregory-Eaves I, Fortin MJ, Lang AS, Laurion I, Maranger R, Prairie YT, Rusak JA, Segura PA, Siron R, Smol JP, Vinebrooke RD, Walsh DA 31419692
BIOLOGY
20 Genomic evidence for the degradation of terrestrial organic matter by pelagic Arctic Ocean Chloroflexi bacteria. Colatriano D, Tran PQ, Guéguen C, Williams WJ, Lovejoy C, Walsh DA 30271971
BIOLOGY
21 BioMiCo: a supervised Bayesian model for inference of microbial community structure. Shafiei M, Dunn KA, Boon E, MacDonald SM, Walsh DA, Gu H, Bielawski JP 25774293
BIOLOGY
22 A compendium of multi-omic sequence information from the Saanich Inlet water column. Hawley AK, Torres-Beltrán M, Zaikova E, Walsh DA, Mueller A, Scofield M, Kheirandish S, Payne C, Pakhomova L, Bhatia M, Shevchuk O, Gies EA, Fairley D, Malfatti SA, Norbeck AD, Brewer HM, Pasa-Tolic L, Del Rio TG, Suttle CA, Tringe S, Hallam SJ 29087368
BIOLOGY
23 A compendium of geochemical information from the Saanich Inlet water column. Torres-Beltrán M, Hawley AK, Capelle D, Zaikova E, Walsh DA, Mueller A, Scofield M, Payne C, Pakhomova L, Kheirandish S, Finke J, Bhatia M, Shevchuk O, Gies EA, Fairley D, Michiels C, Suttle CA, Whitney F, Crowe SA, Tortell PD, Hallam SJ 29087371
BIOLOGY
24 Microbial life under ice: Metagenome diversity and in situ activity of Verrucomicrobia in seasonally ice-covered Lakes. Tran P, Ramachandran A, Khawasik O, Beisner BE, Rautio M, Huot Y, Walsh DA 29921005
BIOLOGY
25 Progress and Challenges in Ocean Metaproteomics and Proposed Best Practices for Data Sharing. Saito MA, Bertrand EM, Duffy ME, Gaylord DA, Held NA, Hervey WJ, Hettich RL, Jagtap PD, Janech MG, Kinkade DB, Leary DH, McIlvin MR, Moore EK, Morris RM, Neely BA, Nunn BL, Saunders JK, Shepherd AI, Symmonds NI, Walsh DA 30702898
BIOLOGY
26 Annual nitrification dynamics in a seasonally ice-covered lake. Massé S, Botrel M, Walsh DA, Maranger R 30893339
BIOLOGY
27 Author Correction: A compendium of geochemical information from the Saanich Inlet water column. Torres-Beltrán M, Hawley AK, Capelle D, Zaikova E, Walsh DA, Mueller A, Scofield M, Payne C, Pakhomova L, Kheirandish S, Finke J, Bhatia M, Shevchuk O, Gies EA, Fairley D, Michiels C, Suttle CA, Whitney F, Crowe SA, Tortell PD, Hallam SJ 30647409
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Modelling Free-Living and Particle-Associated Bacterial Assemblages across the Deep and Hypoxic Lower St. Lawrence Estuary.
Authors:Cui TTDawson TJMcLatchie SDunn KBielawski JWalsh DA
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32434843?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1128/mSphere.00364-20
Publication:mSphere
Keywords:bacterial diversityestuarymarine microbiology
PMID:32434843 Category:mSphere Date Added:2020-05-22
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2 Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
3 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada david.walsh@concordia.ca.

Description:

Modelling Free-Living and Particle-Associated Bacterial Assemblages across the Deep and Hypoxic Lower St. Lawrence Estuary.

mSphere. 2020 May 20;5(3):

Authors: Cui TT, Dawson TJ, McLatchie S, Dunn K, Bielawski J, Walsh DA

Abstract

The Estuary and Gulf of St. Lawrence (EGSL) in eastern Canada are among the largest and most productive coastal ecosystems in the world. Very little information on bacterial diversity exists, hampering our understanding of the relationships between bacterial community structure and biogeochemical function in the EGSL. During the productive spring period, we investigated free-living and particle-associated bacterial communities across the stratified waters of the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary, including the particle-rich surface and bottom boundary layers. Modelling of community structure based on 16S rRNA gene and transcript diversity identified bacterial assemblages specifically associated with four habitat types defined by water mass (upper water or lower water column) and size fraction (free living or particle associated). Assemblages from the upper waters represent sets of cooccurring bacterial populations that are widely distributed across Lower St. Lawrence Estuary surface waters and likely key contributors to organic matter degradation during the spring. In addition, we provide strong evidence that particles in deep hypoxic waters and the bottom boundary layer support a metabolically active bacterial community that is compositionally distinct from those of surface particles and the free-living communities. Among the distinctive features of the bacterial assemblage associated with lower-water particles was the presence of uncultivated lineages of Deltaproteobacteria, including marine myxobacteria. Overall, these results provide an important ecological framework for further investigations of the biogeochemical contributions of bacterial populations in this important coastal marine ecosystem.IMPORTANCE The Estuary and Gulf of St. Lawrence (EGSL) in eastern Canada is an appealing ecosystem for studying how microbial communities and metabolic processes are related to environmental change. Ocean and climate variability result in large spatiotemporal variations in environmental conditions and oceanographic processes. The EGSL is also exposed to a variety of additional human pressures that threaten its integrity and sustainable use, including shipping, aquiculture, coastal development, and oil exploration. To monitor and perhaps mitigate the impacts of these human activities on the EGSL, a comprehensive understanding of the biological communities is required. In this study, we provide the first comprehensive view of bacterial diversity in the EGSL and describe the distinct bacterial assemblages associated with different environmental habitats. This work therefore provides an important baseline ecological framework for bacterial communities in the EGSL useful for further studies on how these communities may respond to environmental change.

PMID: 32434843 [PubMed - in process]





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