Extreme colonizers and rapid profiteers: The challenging world of microorganisms that attack paper and parchment

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Abstract

Microorganisms form the backbone of life on Earth. Over billions of years, they have colonized and shaped every possible niche on the planet. Microbes have modelled both the land and the sea, and have created favourable conditions for multicellular organisms to thrive in. Our understanding of how microbial diversity is distributed across natural environments and how microbes affect ecosystems is constantly evolving as public databases are set up and new techniques based on massive sequencing are developed. The microbiome found in a particular anthropogenic environment is generally much less complex than those found in natural ones: there is less competition and the main actors are often linked to survival mechanisms regulated by a few limiting factors. Despite this simplicity, it is very difficult to link cause and effect when seeking to identify the role of individual organisms. In the case of biodeterioration of paper and parchment, even when analysing the individual components of a simple phenomenon, it is not always easy to understand the mechanisms at play. Works of art are unique objects and the elements that determine the arrival and establishment of one or more microorganisms and the direction that the biodeterioration process takes are always different. In some cases, however, there are common denominators and predictable mechanisms. The variables that come into play are examined below.

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Pinzari, F., & Gutarowska, B. (2021). Extreme colonizers and rapid profiteers: The challenging world of microorganisms that attack paper and parchment. In Microorganisms in the Deterioration and Preservation of Cultural Heritage (pp. 79–113). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-69411-1_4

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