Publications of Vincent Herve
All genres
Journal Article (10)
1.
Journal Article
99, 126140 (2025)
Phylogeny, morphology, and ultrastructure of sessilid peritrich ciliates in termite guts, Termitophrya africana and Doliophrys denislynni gen. nov., sp. nov. European Journal of Protistology 2.
Journal Article
27 (1), e70010 (2025)
A novel lineage of endosymbiotic Actinomycetales genome reduction and acquisition of new functions in Bifidobacteriaceae associated with termite gut flagellates. Environmental Microbiology 3.
Journal Article
12 (1), 201 (2024)
Unveiling lignocellulolytic potential: a genomic exploration of bacterial lineages within the termite gut. Microbiome 4.
Journal Article
100 (9), fiae111 (2024)
Genome reduction in novel, obligately methyl-reducing Methanosarcinales isolated from arthropod guts (Methanolapillus gen. nov. and Methanimicrococcus). FEMS Microbiology Ecology 5.
Journal Article
15 (6), e00826-24 (2024)
Genome reduction and horizontal gene transfer in the evolution of Endomicrobia—rise and fall of an intracellular symbiosis with termite gut flagellates. mBio 6.
Journal Article
14, 1281628 (2023)
Diversity and taxonomic revision of methanogens and other archaea in the intestinal tract of terrestrial arthropods. Frontiers in Microbiology 7.
Journal Article
88 (14), e0050322 (2022)
Comparative analysis of Brucepastera parasyntrophica gen. nov., sp. nov. and Teretinema zuelzerae gen. nov., comb. nov. (Treponemataceae) reveals the importance of interspecies hydrogen transfer in the energy metabolism of spirochetes. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 8.
Journal Article
10 (1), 78 (2022)
The functional evolution of termite gut microbiota. Microbiome 9.
Journal Article
12, 701155 (2021)
Sargassum differentially shapes the microbiota composition and diversity at coastal tide sites and inland storage sites on Caribbean islands. Frontiers in Microbiology 10.
Journal Article
9 (5), 985 (2021)
Functional diversity of the litter-associated fungi from an oxalate-carbonate pathway ecosystem in Madagascar. Microorganisms