Monday, December 01, 2025

New global guidelines streamline

 environmental microbiome research



STREAMS project brings together researchers from around the world to improve how microbiome studies are reported




Michigan State University

Julia Kelliher 

image: 

Michigan State University researcher Julia Kelliher.

view more 

Credit: Julia Kelliher





Microbiomes, the communities of microorganisms that live in and around us, play a vital role in everything from human health to soil fertility and climate regulation. But studying these tiny life forms, especially outside the human body, presents a major challenge: how do scientists share complex data across such a wide range of environments and disciplines?

To help solve this problem, a team of nearly 250 researchers from 28 countries has developed a new set of guidelines called STREAMS, short for Standards for Technical Reporting in Environmental and host-Associated Microbiome Studies. STREAMS builds on the success of STORMS, a widely adopted checklist used in human microbiome research, and expands it to cover microbes found in soil, water, air, animals, plants and even synthetic environments.

Julia Kelliher, lead author of the STREAMS guidelines and a doctoral student in Michigan State University’s department of Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology, explained the need for the new framework in a new paper published in Nature Microbiology.

Kelliher explained that STREAMS is a set of reporting guidelines that helps researchers, students, and reviewers go through manuscripts about environmental, non-human host-associated, and synthetic communities. The guidelines are organized by the structure of a scientific manuscript and help ensure that important details—like permit information or proper citation of reused data—aren’t overlooked.

Kelliher’s hope for STREAMS is simple: “I just want to help some people,” she said, “especially the students. We’ve built tutorials, user guides, and even a list of acronyms to make sure it’s accessible. I want it to be something that makes their work easier and better.”

“Having these reporting guidelines helps everyone—from researchers to reviewers to publishers—work together more effectively,” said Kelliher.

The guidelines emerged from a workshop hosted in collaboration with the American Society for Microbiology Microbe Conference, where 50 participants, including researchers, data repository representatives, journal editors and funding agencies discussed the need for better reporting standards in environmental microbiome research.

“We were very conscious of making sure that we had diversity in all forms of career stage,” Kelliher said. “Some of the best ideas came from early-career researchers who are out there collecting metadata, and they were happy to be included, too.”

STREAMS includes 67 checklist items that guide researchers through each section of a scientific paper, making it easier to write clearly and consistently. It’s also designed to be machine-readable, which means computers can help analyze and compare studies more efficiently. The guidelines align with existing metadata standards and include features that make it easier for researchers to submit their data to public databases.

One major difference between STREAMS and its predecessor, STORMS, is the scope. While STORMS focuses on human microbiomes, STREAMS tackles the unique challenges of environmental and non-human host-associated studies. “There are so many caveats in environmental microbiome research that just don’t translate from the human side,” Kelliher said. “Terminology, data types, even the way samples are collected—it’s all different.”

The STREAMS team also added new items to reflect emerging practices, such as the use of artificial intelligence in research. “Not all journals are at the same stage of requiring AI usage reporting,” she said. “We wanted to make sure STREAMS addressed that.”

Managing input from hundreds of contributors was no small feat. Kelliher personally reviewed over 1,100 pieces of feedback, compiling a 100-page response document to ensure every comment was considered. “It was definitely a challenge,” she said. “We wanted to show the participants that we really cared about every single piece of feedback, and I do think they felt that way.”

STREAMS is designed to be a “living” resource. The team plans to update it regularly based on community feedback, and they’re already working on a paper that uses a large language model to help parse the guidelines.

Kelliher’s path to STREAMS was anything but traditional. Originally trained in neuroscience and costume design, she found herself working at Los Alamos National Laboratory after a chance move to New Mexico during her senior year at Skidmore College. “I was on a hike with a couple of researchers who said they needed an undergrad for a microbiome project,” she recalled. “I interviewed, got the job, and since then I’ve worked on about a dozen bioscience projects.”

Kelliher has been at Los Alamos for 8 years. After completing undergrad, she earned her master’s degree from Johns Hopkins University while working part-time at the Laboratory. Now, she is continuing her work at Los Alamos while pursuing her PhD at Michigan State University. “I still work in addition to the PhD program, which I would not recommend,” she said with a laugh. “I’m certainly very tired all the time.” She also holds a joint appointment with the New Mexico Consortium, a non-profit corporation formed by New Mexico’s three research universities, through which the project receives National Science Foundation funding.

Her experience at Los Alamos, combined with her work on large Department of Energy programs like the National Microbiome Data Collaborative, positioned her to lead the STREAMS initiative. She is collaborating on the work with senior author Emiley Eloe-Fadrosh of the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab and Chloe Mirzayi, the lead author of the STORMS guidelines.

Studies reevaluate reverse weathering process, shifts understanding of global climate




Dauphin Island Sea Lab

Sediment Core 

image: 

Sediment core 

view more 

Credit: Jeff Krause





Two new publications remap the understanding of reverse weathering in the scientific community. The Dauphin Island Sea Lab’s Senior Marine Scientist, Dr. Jeffrey Krause, played a key role in both projects, which include several collaborating institutions. 

Reverse weathering is one of the ocean’s most important yet least understood geochemical processes.  During this natural process, dissolved minerals and chemicals combine to form new clay minerals in seafloor sediments.  These reactions greatly influence the marine silicon cycle and Earth’s climate because they take dissolved elements, like lithium, iron, and manganese, into newly forming minerals. 

Silicon is Earth’s second most abundant element in the Earth’s crust and a vital nutrient for many marine organisms such as diatoms. They are a type of microscopic algae that form the base of the ocean food web. When these organisms die, their glass-like shells settle onto the seafloor, where silica continues to transform over time.

For decades, scientists believed reverse weathering was too slow to influence any environmental change on shorter time scales. However, these new studies reveal both the speed at which the process can occur and the biological drivers involved. 

In a laboratory setting, researchers recreated seafloor conditions in [one study](https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adt3374) to determine the recipe and rates at which authigenic clays can form from biogenic silica, the glass-like material produced by diatoms. What they found is that authigenic clay minerals, which are minerals that form in place within a sediment, can develop in as little as forty days from biogenic silica produced by marine diatoms. Previous estimates suggested that this transformation would take generations. 

“It was just so quick, we were stunned to see how fast this can happen in the laboratory environment,” Krause said. 

This discovery sheds new light on how ocean chemistry regulates carbon dioxide, the ocean’s acidity, and the global climate, as the ocean plays a central role in controlling Earth’s temperature and atmospheric balance. Since carbon dioxide is a significant greenhouse gas, even small variations in how the ocean absorbs or releases it can affect climate stability.  

In the [second study](https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-025-02941-7), scientists used radioactive silicon tracers and sediment samples from the Mississippi River Plume and the Congo Deep Sea Fan to demonstrate that microorganisms enhanced silica uptake and the formation of sediment rates by a factor of three and a half compared to environments without microbial activity.  

Within days, microbes were able to dissolve existing silica and reform it into new mineral phases, a process that the scientists initially thought would take much longer. Dr. Krause and colleagues found that over half of the reprecipitated silica in marine sediments was the result of microbial activity, while only about a quarter formed through the nonliving reactions. 

These findings expand long-standing assumptions that microbes influence silicon cycling primarily in the water column or in extreme environments, such as hydrothermal vents. 

Together, these two papers represent a significant shift in understanding how reverse weathering is both biologically mediated and occurs much faster than classic models predicted, with important implications for global carbon cycling and the stability of the Earth’s climate system. 

These discoveries show that ocean sediments can influence carbon and nutrient cycles at a faster rate, which directly affects how the ocean can store carbon dioxide. 

For the future, the studies set the path for upcoming advances. Dr. Krause is currently leading two National Science Foundation-funded projects, in collaboration with Dr. Michalopoulos and Dr. Brandi Kiel Reese, to examine the mechanisms of microbially mediated reverse weathering. The work aims to resolve any questions about how life shapes mineral formation, nutrient cycles, and the ocean’s ability to regulate atmospheric carbon dioxide in the long term.

## Publications

*Simin Zhao et al., Rapid transformation of biogenic silica to authigenic clay: Mechanisms and geochemical constraints.Sci. Adv.11,eadt3374. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adt3374*

*Michalopoulos, P., Krause, J.W., Pickering, R.A. et al. Rapid microbial activity in marine sediments significantly enhances silica cycling rates compared to abiotic processes. Commun Earth Environ 6, 982. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02941-7*

Journal

DOI

Method of Research

Subject of Research

Article Title

Article Publication Date

Renewable lignin waste transformed into powerful catalyst for clean hydrogen production




Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural University

Lignin-derived carbon fibers loaded with NiO/Fe3O4 to promote oxygen evolution reaction 

image: 

Lignin-derived carbon fibers loaded with NiO/Fe3O4 to promote oxygen evolution reaction

view more 

Credit: Xuezhi Zeng, Yutao Pan, Yi Qi, Yanlin Qin, & Xueqing Qiu





Researchers have unveiled a new catalyst made from renewable plant waste that could significantly accelerate clean hydrogen production. The innovative material, created by embedding nickel oxide and iron oxide nanoparticles into lignin-derived carbon fibers, boosts the efficiency and stability of the oxygen evolution reaction, a key step in water electrolysis.

The study, published in Biochar X, demonstrates that the new catalyst achieves a low overpotential of 250 mV at 10 mA cm² and maintains strong performance for over 50 hours at high current density. These results suggest a promising path toward cost-effective and sustainable alternatives to precious metal catalysts that are currently used in industrial water splitting systems.

“Oxygen evolution is one of the biggest barriers to efficient hydrogen production,” said corresponding author Yanlin Qin of the Guangdong University of Technology. “Our work shows that a catalyst made from lignin, a low-value byproduct of the paper and biorefinery industries, can deliver high activity and exceptional durability. This provides a greener and more economical route to large-scale hydrogen generation.”

Lignin, one of the most abundant biopolymers on Earth, is typically burned for low-grade heat. By turning this biomass waste into functional carbon fibers using electrospinning and thermal treatment, the research team created a conductive scaffold that supports and stabilizes the active metal oxide particles. The resulting catalyst, called NiO/Fe3O4@LCFs, features a network of nitrogen-doped carbon fibers that promote rapid charge transfer, high surface area, and strong mechanical robustness.

High-resolution microscopy revealed that the nickel and iron oxides form a nanoscale heterojunction inside the carbon fiber network. This interface plays a crucial role in accelerating oxygen evolution by promoting balanced adsorption and release of reaction intermediates. The combination of the metal oxides with the conductive carbon support enhances electron transport and suppresses particle agglomeration, two common limitations of traditional base metal catalysts.

Electrochemical tests confirmed that the catalyst outperforms single-metal versions, particularly at high current densities needed for practical water electrolysis. The material also shows a Tafel slope of only 138 mV per decade, indicating faster kinetics. In situ Raman measurements and density functional theory calculations support the proposed mechanism, revealing that the engineered interface facilitates key steps in the oxygen evolution pathway.

“Our goal was to develop a catalyst that not only performs well but is scalable and rooted in sustainable materials,” said co-corresponding author Xueqing Qiu. “Because lignin is produced in huge quantities worldwide, the approach offers a realistic path toward greener industrial hydrogen production technologies.”

The study highlights the growing potential of biomass-derived materials in energy conversion systems. By combining renewable carbon supports with rational engineering of metal oxide interfaces, the approach aligns with global efforts to develop low-cost and environmentally friendly solutions for clean energy.

The researchers believe that the strategy can be extended to other metal combinations and catalytic processes, opening new possibilities for designing next-generation electrocatalysts from abundant natural resources.

 

=== 

Journal reference: Zeng X, Pan Y, Qi Y, Qin Y, Qiu X. 2025. Lignin-derived carbon fibers loaded with NiO/Fe3O4 to promote oxygen evolution reaction. Biochar X 1: e011 

https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/bchax-0025-0011 

=== 

About the Journal: 

Biochar X is an open access, online-only journal aims to transcend traditional disciplinary boundaries by providing a multidisciplinary platform for the exchange of cutting-edge research in both fundamental and applied aspects of biochar. The journal is dedicated to supporting the global biochar research community by offering an innovative, efficient, and professional outlet for sharing new findings and perspectives. Its core focus lies in the discovery of novel insights and the development of emerging applications in the rapidly growing field of biochar science. 

Follow us on FacebookX, and Bluesky.