A research paper by Samiran Banerjee, NDSU assistant professor of microbiological sciences, and co-author Marcel G. A. van der Heijden, professor at the University of Zurich, entitled “Soil microbiomes and one health” was published in the Aug. 23, edition of the journal Nature Reviews Microbiology.
Using the concept of “one health” – the idea that describes how human health is connected to the health of animals, plants and environments – the paper postulates that soil, plant and human microbiomes are more interconnected than previously thought. The authors detail how soils are a cornerstone of one health and serve as a source and reservoir of pathogens, beneficial microorganisms and the overall microbial diversity in a wide range of organisms and ecosystems.
Banerjee and van der Heijden’s paper has been shared by more than 1,000 individuals and currently has the highest Altmetric attention scores among similar age articles.
Nature Reviews Microbiology is a peer-reviewed review journal published monthly by the Nature Portfolio. It features reviews and perspectives on microbiology, bridging fundamental research and its clinical, industrial, and environmental applications. The journal has a very high two-year impact factor of 78, which denotes the average number of times articles from the journal have been cited by other articles in the past two years.
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