Turtle under water, in front of her a cloud of dust.

How an ocean-fertilising bacterium forms aggregates

Trichodesmium, a common and ecologically important bacterium, fertilises nutrient-poor regions of the oceans and thereby enables higher life. Crucial to its success is its ability to form aggregates in order to react quickly to changes in its environment. ETH Zurich researchers have shown how the microbes organise themselves in this process.

by Michael Keller
In the picture above: Bloom of the filamentous cyanobacterium Trichodesmium. (Photograph: Keystone)

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