Andreas F. Haas
Utrecht University
57 Papers
77 Citations
Andreas F. Haas is an academic researcher from Utrecht University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coral reef & Reef. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 50 publications. Previous affiliations of Andreas F. Haas include Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich & University of California, San Diego.
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Papers
Challenges in microbial ecology: building predictive understanding of community function and dynamics
Stefanie Widder,Rosalind J. Allen,Thomas Pfeiffer,Thomas P. Curtis,Carsten Wiuf,William T. Sloan,Otto X. Cordero,Sam P. Brown,Babak Momeni,Wenying Shou,Helen Kettle,Harry J. Flint,Andreas F. Haas,Béatrice Laroche,Jan-Ulrich Kreft,Paul B. Rainey,Shiri Freilich,Stefan Schuster,Kim Milferstedt,Jan Roelof van der Meer,Tobias Groβkopf,Jef Huisman,Andrew Free,Cristian Picioreanu,Christopher Quince,Isaac Klapper,Simon Labarthe,Barth F. Smets,Harris H. Wang,Orkun S. Soyer +29 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the ability to predict and manage the function of these highly complex, dynamically changing communities is limited, and that close coordination of experimental data collection and method development with mathematical model building is needed to achieve significant progress in understanding of microbial dynamics and function.
Lytic to temperate switching of viral communities
Ben Knowles,Cynthia B. Silveira,Barbara A. Bailey,Katie L. Barott,Vito Adrian Cantu,Ana G Cobián-Güemes,Felipe H. Coutinho,Elizabeth A. Dinsdale,Ben Felts,Kathryn A. Furby,Emma E. George,Kevin Green,Gustavo B. Gregoracci,Andreas F. Haas,John M. Haggerty,Eric R. Hester,Nao Hisakawa,Linda Wegley Kelly,Yan Wei Lim,Mark Little,Antoni Luque,T. McDole-Somera,Katelyn McNair,L. S. de Oliveira,Steven D. Quistad,N. L. Robinett,Enric Sala,Peter Salamon,Peter Salamon,Savannah E. Sanchez,Stuart A. Sandin,Genivaldo G. Z. Silva,Jennifer E. Smith,Christopher C. Sullivan,C. Thompson,Mark J. A. Vermeij,Merry Youle,C. Young,Brian J. Zgliczynski,R. Brainard,Robert Edwards,Jim Nulton,Fabiano L. Thompson,Forest Rohwer,Forest Rohwer +44 more
TL;DR: The Piggyback-the-Winner model wherein temperate dynamics become increasingly important in ecosystems with high microbial densities is proposed; thus ‘more microbes, fewer viruses’ is proposed.
•Journal Article
Challenges in microbial ecology: building predictive understanding of community function and dynamics
Stefanie Widder,Rosalind J. Allen,Thomas Pfeiffer,Thomas P. Curtis,Carsten Wiuf,William T. Sloan,Otto X. Cordero,Sam P. Brown,Babak Momeni,Wenying Shou,Helen Kettle,Harry J. Flint,Andreas F. Haas,B atrice Laroche,Jan-Ulrich Kreft,Paul B. Rainey,Shiri Freilich,Stefan Schuster,Kim Milferstedt,Jan Roelof van der Meer,Jef Huisman,Andrew Free,Cristian Picioreanu,Christopher Quince,Isaac Klapper,Simon Labarthe,Barth F. Smets,Harris H. Wang,Orkun S. Soyer,Tobias Grosskopf,Otto X. Cordero Sanchez +30 more
TL;DR: It is argued that addressing this challenge requires close coordination of experimental data collection and method development with mathematical model building, and that such integration is needed to achieve significant progress in understanding of MC dynamics and function.
526
Global microbialization of coral reefs.
Andreas F. Haas,Mohamed Farook Mohamed Fairoz,Linda Wegley Kelly,Craig E. Nelson,Elizabeth A. Dinsdale,Robert Edwards,Steve Giles,Mark Hatay,Nao Hisakawa,Ben Knowles,Yan Wei Lim,Heather Maughan,Olga Pantos,Ty N.F. Roach,Savannah E. Sanchez,Cynthia B. Silveira,Stuart A. Sandin,Jennifer E. Smith,Forest Rohwer +18 more
TL;DR: Using an unprecedented data set of >400 samples from 60 coral reef sites, it is shown that the central DDAM predictions are consistent across three ocean basins and Reef algal cover is positively correlated with lower concentrations of DOC and higher microbial abundances.
262
Effects of Coral Reef Benthic Primary Producers on Dissolved Organic Carbon and Microbial Activity
Andreas F. Haas,Craig E. Nelson,Linda Wegley Kelly,Craig A. Carlson,Forest Rohwer,James J. Leichter,Alex S. J. Wyatt,Jennifer E. Smith +7 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that benthic reef algae can release a significant fraction of their photosynthetically-fixed carbon as DOC, these release rates vary by species, and this DOC is available to and consumed by reef associated microbes.