A group of microbiologists from China, Germany, and additional European countries met in Beijing in September 2007 and held a conference entitled "Microbes and the Environment". The purpose of this conference was to evaluate how microbes (a) shape the planet and (b) might be harnessed to solve environmental problems. This book provides an overview of many of the contributions made during this conference.
Section A:  Introduction
Chapter 1   Current and future perspectives on the environmental importance of
     microorganisms
     Harold L. Drake and Shuang-Jiang Liu
Section B:  Microbial Cycling of Elements in Diverse Habitats
Chapter 2   Two impossible microbes with global implications: the nitrite-dependent
     anaerobic oxidation of methane and ammonium
     Mike Jetten, Huub Op den Camp, Jan Keltjens and Marc Strous
Chapter 3   Microbial diversity in the deep-sea environments revealed by combined
     molecular approaches
     Xiang Xiao, Fengping Wang and Jun Meng
Chapter 4   Exploring an unknown world: bacteria of the deep biosphere below the
     seafloor
     Heribert Cypionka
Chapter 5   Temperature effects on methanogenic microbial communities
     Ralf Conrad
Chapter 6   Microbial diversity under long-term fertilization regimes of Chinese soils
     Ji-zheng He
Chapter 7   Functional gene assessment of denitrifying Prokaryotes: implications for
     understanding the ecology of denitrifiers
     Sara Hallin
Chapter 8   Uncultured microorganisms in Hainan mangrove soil: diversity and functional
     genes
     Kui Hong and Bing Yan
Chapter 9   Acetogens: anaerobic gamblers at the oxic-anoxic interface
     Harold L. Drake and Anita S. Goflner
Chapter 10  Phosphorus cycling at water: sediment interface mediated by phosphorus-
     solublizing bacteria
     Hong-Li Yuan and Jian-Hang Qu
Chapter 11  Planktonic bacteria in Chinese and European lakes: are they different?
     Martin W. Hahn and Qinglong L. Wu
Chapter 12  Phototrophic consortia: model systems for the interaction between nonrelated
     bacteria
     Jorg Overmann
Section C:  Bioremediation and Bioaugmentation: Harnessing Microbes
Chapter 13  Microbial degradation of carbazole and dibenzofuran by Genus Sphingomonas:
     perspective and challenge
     Ping Xu, Zhonghui Gai Bo Yu and Cuiqing Ma
Chapter 14  Microbiology and application of biological sulfate reduction
     Alfons J. M. Stares, Piet N. L. Lens, Cees J. N. Buisman, Albert J. H. Janssen
     and Gerard Muyzer
Chapter 15  Effect of oil contamination and bioremediation on bacterial communities in
     polar sea-ice environments
     Elisabeth Helmke and Birte Gerdes
Chapter 16  Diverse strategies of polychlorophenol degradation by microorganisms
     Luying Xun
Chapter 17  Microbial iron oxidation and the degradation of persistent organic pollutants
     Ulrich Szewzyk, Songyan Qin, Burga Braun, Oliver Thronicker, Uta Bockelmann
     and Martin Meixner
Chapter 18  Effect of metal-reducing microorganisms on element fluxes in a former
     uranium-mining district
     Kirsten Kiisel, Eva-Maria Burkhardt and Jana Sitte
Chapter 19  Reductive dehalogenation of chlorinated aromatic compounds by anaerobic
     bacteria
     Ute Lechner and Anke Wagner
Chapter 20  Degradation and assimilation of aromatic compounds by Corynebacterium
     glutamicum
     Shuang-Jiang Liu and Muhammad Tausif Chaudhry
Chapter 21  Host-vector systems for hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus
     Qunxin She, Ling Deng, Haojun Zhu, Maria Dreibrol, Mariana Awayez
     and Yunxiang Liang
Index