Nathan L R Williams

Nathan L R Williams
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • Postdoctoral Scholar at University of Southern California

Microbial Ecology

About

15
Publications
1,595
Reads
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187
Citations
Introduction
During my PhD (2019-2022), I used molecular techniques to investigate microbial hazards in coastal environments. I have joined the Fuhrman lab in August 2023, and my research interests have moved beyond water quality, and I am now interested in using metagenomics to facilitate a better understanding of the distribution of marine microbes, why they are where they are, and to better understand the roles they play in major global biogeochemical cycles. Website: https://www.nathanlrwilliams.com/
Current institution
University of Southern California
Current position
  • Postdoctoral Scholar
Additional affiliations
February 2019 - July 2021
University of Technology Sydney
Position
  • PhD Student
Education
January 2019 - February 2023
University of Technology Sydney
Field of study
  • Microbial Ecology and Water Quality
February 2014 - November 2018
University of Technology Sydney
Field of study
  • Honours Environmental Science

Publications

Publications (15)
Article
Urbanised beaches are regularly impacted by faecal pollution, but management actions to resolve the causes of contamination are often obfuscated by the inability of standard Faecal Indicator Bacteria (FIB) analyses to discriminate sources of faecal material or detect other microbial hazards, including antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). We aimed to...
Article
Anthropogenic waste streams can be major sources of antibiotic resistant microbes within the environment, creating a potential risk to public health. We examined patterns in the occurrence of a suite of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and their links to enteric bacteria at a popular swimming beach in Australia that experiences intermittent conta...
Article
Full-text available
Oyster diseases are a major impediment to the profitability and growth of the oyster aquaculture industry. In recent years, geographically widespread outbreaks of disease caused by ostreid herpesvirus-1 microvariant (OsHV-1 μvar) have led to mass mortalities among Crassostrea gigas, the Pacific Oyster. Attempts to minimize the impact of this diseas...
Article
Indoor air quality (IAQ) is of growing public health concern which has prompted the use of plants to phytoremediate air pollution in interior spaces. Active green walls are emerging as a means of reducing indoor contaminants and have demonstrated efficacy comparable to conventional air filtering technologies. However, the use of active airflow thro...
Article
Full-text available
Acanthamoeba is an opportunistic free-living heterotrophic protist that is the most predominant amoeba in diverse ecological habitats. Acanthamoeba causes amoebic keratitis (AK), a painful and potentially blinding corneal infection. Major risk factors for AK have been linked to non-optimal contact lens hygiene practices and Acanthamoeba contaminati...
Article
Marine water temperatures are increasing globally, with eastern Australian estuaries warming faster than predicted. There is growing evidence that this rapid warming of coastal waters is increasing the abundance and virulence of pathogenic members of the Vibrionaceae, posing a significant health risk to both humans and aquatic organisms. Fish disea...
Article
Estuaries are critical habitats subject to a range of stressors requiring effective management. Microbes are gaining recognition as effective environmental indicators, however, the response of host associated communities to stressors remains poorly understood. We examined microbial communities from seawater, sediments and the estuarine fish Pelates...
Article
Full-text available
The marine genus of bacteria, Vibrio, includes several significant human and animal pathogens, highlighting the importance of defining the factors that govern their occurrence in the environment. To determine what controls large-scale spatial patterns among this genus, we examined the abundance and diversity of Vibrio communities along a 4000 km la...
Article
Full-text available
Aim Spatial compositional turnover varies considerably among co‐occurring assemblages of organisms, presumably shaped by common processes related to species traits. We investigated patterns of spatial turnover in a diverse set of marine assemblages using zeta diversity, which extends traditional pairwise measures of turnover to capture the roles of...

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