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Authors whose works are in public domain in at least one jurisdiction

List of works by Chris Greening

A nitrite-oxidizing bacterium constitutively consumes atmospheric hydrogen

A widespread hydrogenase drives fermentative growth of gut bacteria in healthy people

Abundant and active acetogens enhance the carbon dioxide sink of Blue Carbon ecosystems

Aerotolerant methanogens use seaweed and seagrass metabolites to drive marine methane emissions

An obligate aerobe adapts to hypoxia by hybridising fermentation with carbon storage

Atmospheric chemosynthesis is phylogenetically and geographically widespread and contributes significantly to carbon fixation throughout cold deserts

Atmospheric hydrogen oxidation extends to the domain archaea

Bark-dwelling methanotrophic bacteria decrease methane emissions from trees

Bark-dwelling methanotrophic bacteria decrease methane emissions from trees

BonA fromAcinetobacter baumanniiforms a divisome-localized decamer that supports outer envelope function

Carbon monoxide-driven proton respiration enables facultative anaerobes to survive electron acceptor limitation

Chemosynthesis enhances carbon fixation and nutrient cycling in an active microbialite ecosystem

Distinct microbial hydrogen and reductant disposal pathways explain interbreed variations in ruminant methane yield

Hydrogen-dependent dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium enables growth ofCampylobacterotaisolates

Hydrogenase-driven ATP synthesis from air

Metabolically flexible microorganisms rapidly establish glacial foreland ecosystems

Metagenomic analysis of marsupial gut microbiomes provides a genetic basis for the low methane economy

Mycobacteria tolerate carbon monoxide by remodelling their respiratory chain

Oxygen metabolism in descendants of the archaeal-eukaryotic ancestor

Quinone extraction drives atmospheric carbon monoxide oxidation in bacteria

Resilient Antarctic soil bacteria consume trace gases across wide temperature ranges

Resilient Antarctic soil bacteria consume trace gases across wide temperature ranges