Talk:The Responses of Cyanobacteria to UV-B Irradiation: Difference between revisions
(Created page with 'It is good that you devoted your page Cyanobacteria, a very deserving microorganism (what would we be without it). Your page had a good flow and the subtopics made the contents c…') |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
It is good that you devoted your page Cyanobacteria, a very deserving microorganism (what would we be without it). Your page had a good flow and the subtopics made the contents clear. It was good how you related the bacterium to the rest of the ecosystem and emphasized its importance. | It is good that you devoted your page Cyanobacteria, a very deserving microorganism (what would we be without it). Your page had a good flow and the subtopics made the contents clear. It was good how you related the bacterium to the rest of the ecosystem and emphasized its importance. | ||
Very nice! You used a clear and consistent writing style throughout the page that made it very easy to read. I really enjoyed the commentary that you made on each of the figures/pictures--this helped a lot in interpreting the data and leading us directly to the information of highest interest. From the Gliding section: would you be able to provide some background information on how the wavelength of light (i.e. UV or visible) relates to the ability of light to penetrate into soil? Does higher energy light always penetrate more into materials? I don't know much about the properties of light, but how is it that cyanobacteria in soil can move downward in the soil and absorb more visible light while avoiding UV light? Also, you presented a wide variety of techniques that cyanobacteria use to combat UV light, but is there any data that shows the effect on growth when these protective responses are upregulated? I can imagine that increasing production of MAA would require more energy and cause the growth rate to slow, but have any studies looked at growth rate with increasing amounts of exposure to UV light (and how that effects the amount of, say, MAA produced)? Your page provides insight into the way some of the most important microbes to this planet operate. Great job! | |||
Ensure that your chemical abbreviations are formatted properly -- H<sub>2</sub>O and H<sub>2</sub>S should have subscripts, H<sup>+</sup> should have superscripts, etc. Other than that, your paper is very straightforward and excellently organized. I appreciate that you support broad statements with your interpretation of current research (as opposed to a figure with a sentence pulled directly from the discussion section of the paper); this contributes to a fluid paper that does not rely unnecessarily on technical jargon. |
Latest revision as of 15:52, 27 April 2010
It is good that you devoted your page Cyanobacteria, a very deserving microorganism (what would we be without it). Your page had a good flow and the subtopics made the contents clear. It was good how you related the bacterium to the rest of the ecosystem and emphasized its importance.
Very nice! You used a clear and consistent writing style throughout the page that made it very easy to read. I really enjoyed the commentary that you made on each of the figures/pictures--this helped a lot in interpreting the data and leading us directly to the information of highest interest. From the Gliding section: would you be able to provide some background information on how the wavelength of light (i.e. UV or visible) relates to the ability of light to penetrate into soil? Does higher energy light always penetrate more into materials? I don't know much about the properties of light, but how is it that cyanobacteria in soil can move downward in the soil and absorb more visible light while avoiding UV light? Also, you presented a wide variety of techniques that cyanobacteria use to combat UV light, but is there any data that shows the effect on growth when these protective responses are upregulated? I can imagine that increasing production of MAA would require more energy and cause the growth rate to slow, but have any studies looked at growth rate with increasing amounts of exposure to UV light (and how that effects the amount of, say, MAA produced)? Your page provides insight into the way some of the most important microbes to this planet operate. Great job!
Ensure that your chemical abbreviations are formatted properly -- H2O and H2S should have subscripts, H+ should have superscripts, etc. Other than that, your paper is very straightforward and excellently organized. I appreciate that you support broad statements with your interpretation of current research (as opposed to a figure with a sentence pulled directly from the discussion section of the paper); this contributes to a fluid paper that does not rely unnecessarily on technical jargon.