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Posts by Elsa Abs

New paper out in @natecoevo.nature.com showing that growth rate is as a stronger predictor of SOC than CUE. Congrats Xianjin He for leading this work!

2 months ago 6 0 0 0
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Excited to convene the upcoming EGU webinar on "Mental Health in Academia: Obstacles, Advocacy and Inclusion" on 9 February at 16:00 CET.

Open to all.
👉 Register here: www.egu.eu/webinars/694...

@egu.eu @egubg.bsky.social @anabastos.bsky.social @elsa-abs.bsky.social

2 months ago 15 8 2 1

Last few hours to submit an abstract to our session on eco-evolutionary drivers of biogeochemistry #EGU26

⏰ Abstract deadline: January 15 at 13:00 CET
🔗 Session link: lnkd.in/eHV6jDrh

Co-conveners: @manzonilab.bsky.social , @bopplaurent.bsky.social, Colin Prentice, Elisa Bruni

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

If you work on how diversity and/or adaptation shape ecosystem functioning—in soils, vegetation, or aquatic systems—consider our session 😃 #EGU26

⏰ Deadline: Jan 15
🔗 Session link: lnkd.in/eHV6jDrh

Co-conveners: @manzonilab.bsky.social, @bopplaurent.bsky.social, Colin Prentice, Elisa Bruni

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

Happy New Year! 🎉

Just a quick reminder about our EGU26 session on eco-evolutionary drivers of biogeochemistry — we’d love to see your abstracts!

⏰ Deadline: Jan 15

Co-organizers: Elisa Bruni, @manzonilab.bsky.social, @bopplaurent.bsky.social, Colin Prentice

3 months ago 0 2 0 0

Session co-organizers: Elisa Bruni, @manzonilab.bsky.social, @bopplaurent.bsky.social, Colin Prentice

4 months ago 2 0 0 0
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📣 EGU26 – Call for abstracts

Session: Functional diversity in motion: Eco-evolutionary drivers of biogeochemical processes across terrestrial & aquatic systems.

🎤 Solicited speakers: Jaideep Joshi & Boris Sauterey
🗓 Deadline: 15 Jan 2026
🔗 meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU26/sessio...

4 months ago 1 1 1 3

Starting in 5min!

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
Session ITS5.2/BG10.2

How do scientific ideas evolve and which paradigms in Earth system science deserve a fresh look? We welcome submissions to address these questions in our #EGU26 session “Re-examining Seminal Ideas in Earth System Science” www.egu26.eu/session/57516

4 months ago 6 4 1 2

@anabastos.bsky.social @rebeccamayvarney.bsky.social @egu.eu @egubg.bsky.social

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Excited to convene an EGU webinar on "Fostering Diversity, Equality and Inclusion in Academia" on 10 Dec at 16:30 CET.

Davide Faranda will share insights on building a more inclusive and equitable research culture across the geosciences.

Open to all.
👉 Register: www.egu.eu/webinars/

4 months ago 7 5 1 1

🎉 I'm thrilled to share that I've started a permanent research position as Chargée de Recherche (CR) at the CNRS!
@cnrs-insu.bsky.social

I'm super thankful to all my amazing colleagues and friends who gave feedback and encouragement during the application process 💚

5 months ago 13 0 1 0

Congratulations Kyle!!! (love the soil mates 🤣🥰)

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

Thank you for sharing Brian!

9 months ago 1 0 1 0
LinkedIn This link will take you to a page that’s not on LinkedIn

Link to submit your abstract: lnkd.in/gkDzqqaX

9 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Wondering where to submit your abstract for #AGU25 @agu.org?

Check out our session co-organized with @kristenobacter.bsky.social (UMass), Ulas Karaoz and Nicola Falco (Berkeley Lab).

In-person invited speakers: @andreasrichter.bsky.social (U of Vienna) & Amilcare Porporato (Princeton) 🤩

9 months ago 6 4 1 1

I'd love that! I'm based in Paris. Would that work for you?

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Working on microscale microbial functions and/or scaling up?

Submit to our Elementa special feature!

🔗 lnkd.in/gChyjaiM
📝 Rolling publication
📅 Final deadline: Sept 20, 2025
🌍 Contributions welcome from soil, ocean & human systems.

9 months ago 5 3 0 0

🙏 co-authors: @scott-saleska.bsky.social , Steve Allison, Philippe Ciais, @chopinyang.bsky.social , Mike Weintraub and Régis Ferrière.

10 months ago 1 0 0 0

6. Conclusion

Microbial eco-evolution could destabilize soil carbon.
Models that ignore it risk underestimating climate-carbon feedbacks.
We hope this work opens the door to more theory-driven, evolution-aware Earth system models. (7/7)

10 months ago 1 0 1 0
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5. Global heterogeneity of the eco-evolutionary effect

We wondered if we could replace eco-evolution with a constant correction. Answer: no. Its effect is uneven—negligible in warm regions, but up to 2× more soil C loss in cold ones. Why? Optimal enzyme allocation responds nonlinearly. (6/7)

10 months ago 2 0 1 0
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4. Implication for global soil C projections

We thought that microbial adaptation would buffer warming-induced soil C loss. But because it amplifies enzyme production (as shown above), we found that adaptation aggravates the loss—by x1.8 globally. (5/7)

10 months ago 1 0 1 0

3. Experimental validation

We reviewed 13 warming studies:
✅ 9 matched our predictions (6 eco-evolution, 3 physio)
❌ 3 didn’t show increased enzyme production (though evidence was weaker).
Overall, warming tends to increase microbial investment in resource acquisition. (4/7)

10 months ago 1 0 1 0
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2. Evolutionary result

We found that in hostile environments (e.g. high mortality, slow uptake), selection favors direct investment in biomass over the riskier strategy of enzyme production. Since warming mainly increases uptake rate, we predicted it would favor stronger enzyme producers. (3/7)

10 months ago 1 0 1 0
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1. The eco-evolutionary model

We added a trade-off to a classic microbe-soil C model and used adaptive dynamics to evolve enzyme allocation. To prevent freeloaders from taking over, we included implicit spatial structure. Bonus: enzyme production emerges—it’s no longer a free parameter. (2/7)

10 months ago 1 0 1 0
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New paper out in Global Change Biology 🤩

doi.org/10.1111/gcb....

We built the first soil carbon model that includes microbial eco-evolution using game theory — and found that adaptation could nearly double global soil carbon loss by 2100. Here is how👇(1/7)

10 months ago 34 15 2 2

🙏 co-authors: @scott-saleska.bsky.social, Steve Allison, Philippe Ciais, @chopinyang.bsky.social, Mike Weintraub and Régis Ferrière.

10 months ago 0 0 0 0

6. Conclusion

Microbial eco-evolution could destabilize soil carbon.
Models that ignore it risk underestimating climate-carbon feedbacks.
We hope this work opens the door to more theory-driven, evolution-aware Earth system models. (7/7)

10 months ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

5. Global heterogeneity of the eco-evolutionary effect

We wondered if we could replace eco-evolution with a constant correction. Answer: no. Its effect is uneven—negligible in warm regions, but up to 2× more soil C loss in cold ones. Why? Optimal enzyme allocation responds nonlinearly. (6/7)

10 months ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

4. Implication for global soil C projections

We thought that microbial adaptation would buffer warming-induced soil C loss. But because it amplifies enzyme production (as shown above), we found that adaptation aggravates the loss—by x1.8 globally. (5/7)

10 months ago 0 0 1 0