0

Manual of Environmental Microbiology

eBook - ASM Books

Erschienen am 02.05.2016, 4. Auflage 2016
171,99 €
(inkl. MwSt.)

Download

E-Book Download
Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781683673231
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 0 S., 47.58 MB
E-Book
Format: EPUB
DRM: Adobe DRM

Beschreibung

The single most comprehensive resource for environmental microbiology

Environmental microbiology, the study of the roles that microbes play in all planetary environments, is one of the most important areas of scientific research. TheManual of Environmental Microbiology, Fourth Edition, provides comprehensive coverage of this critical and growing field.

Thoroughly updated and revised, the Manual is the definitive reference for information on microbes in air, water, and soil and their impact on human health and welfare. Written in accessible, clear prose, the manual covers four broad areas: general methodologies, environmental public health microbiology, microbial ecology, and biodegradation and biotransformation. This wealth of information is divided into 18 sections each containing chapters written by acknowledged topical experts from the international community.

Specifically, this new edition of theManual

Contains completely new sections covering microbial risk assessment, quality control, and microbial source trackingIncorporates a summary of the latest methodologies used to study microorganisms in various environmentsSynthesizes the latest information on the assessment of microbial presence and microbial activity in natural and artificial environments

TheManual of Environmental Microbiology is an essential reference for environmental microbiologists, microbial ecologists, and environmental engineers, as well as those interested in human diseases, water and wastewater treatment, and biotechnology.

Inhalt

Editorial Board ix

Contributors xi

Volume I Introduction

Chapter 1.1.1 Introduction

Volume II General Methodology (Volume Editor:Suresh D. Pillai)

Section 2.1 Culture-Based and Physiological Detection (Section Editor:Yoichi Kamagata)

Chapter 2.1.1 Detection of specific taxa using chromogenic and fluorogenic media (Mohammad Manafi)

Chapter 2.1.2 - Anaerobic cultivation (Takashi Narihiro, Yoichi Kamagata)

Chapter 2.1.3 - New devices for cultivation (Yoshiteru Aoi, Slava Epstein)

Section 2.2 Microscopic Methods (Section Editor:Cleber Oeverney)

Chapter 2.2.1 - Gold-based in situ hybridization for phylogenetic single-cell detection of prokaryotes in environmental samples (Thilo Eickhorst, Hannes Schmidt)

Chapter 2.2.2 - Assessment of prokaryotic biological activity at the single cell level by combining microautoradiography and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) (Cleber C. Ouverney)

Section 2.3 - Target-Specific Detection (Section Editor:Douglas R. Call)

Chapter 2.3.1 - Antibody-based technologies for environmental biodetection (Cheryl L. Baird, Susan M. Varnum)

Chapter 2.3.2 - PCR, real-time PCR, digital PCR and isothermal amplification (Rachel A. Bartholomew, Janine R. Hutchison, Timothy M. Straub, Douglas R. Call)

Chapter 2.3.3 - Microarray-Based Environmental Diagnostics (Darrell P. Chandler)

Chapter 2.3.4 - Field Application of Pathogen Detection Technologies (Timothy M. Straub, Douglas R. Call, Cindy Bruckner-Lea, Heather Colburn, Cheryl L. Baird, Rachel A. Bartholomew, Richard Ozanich, Kristin Jarman)

Section 2.4 - Microbial Community Analysis of Environmental Samples with Next Generation Sequencing (Section Editor:Stefan J. Green)

Chapter 2.4.1 Introduction to Microbial community analysis of environmental samples with next-generation sequencing (Stefan J. Green, Josh D. Neufeld)

Chapter 2.4.2 Microbial Community Analysis Using High-Throughput Amplicon Sequencing (Danny Ionescu, Will A. Overholt, Michael D. J. Lynch, Josh D. Neufeld, Ankur Naqib, Stefan J. Green)

Chapter 2.4.3 Functional Metagenomics: Procedures and Progress (Laura S. Morris, Julian R. Marchesi)

Chapter 2.4.4 Metagenomics: Assigning Functional Status to the Community Gene Content (Naseer Sangwan, Rup Lal)

Chapter 2.4.5 - Generation and Analysis of Microbial Metatranscriptomes (Neha Sarode, Darren J. Parris, Sangita Ganesh, Sherry L. Seston, Frank J. Stewart)

Section 2.5 - Qa/Qc In Environmental Microbiology (Section Editor: Yildiz T. Chambers)

Chapter 2.5.1 Introduction(Kevin K. Connell)

Chapter 2.5.2 General Quality Control (Robin K. Oshiro)

Chapter 2.5.3 Quality Control for Bacteriological Analyses (Ellen Braun-Howland)

Chapter 2.5.4 Quality Control for Virological Analyses (Richard E. Danielson)

Chapter 2.5.5 Quality Control for USEPA Method 1623 Protozoan Analysis and PCR Analyses (George D. Di Giovanni, Gregory D. Sturbaum)

Chapter 2.5.6 The Role of Statistical Thinking Statistical Thinking in Environmental Microbiology (J. Vaun McArthur, R. Cary Tuckfield)

Chapter 2.5.7 Study Design(Yildiz T. Chambers, Robin K. Oshiro)

Section 2.6 - Sampling Methods (Section Editor:J. Scott Meschke)

Chapter 2.6.1 Water Sampling and Processing Techniques for Public Health-Related Microbes (Vincent Hill)

Chapter 2.6.2 Surface Sampling (Laura J. Rose, Judith Noble-Wang, Matthew J. Arduino)

Chapter 2.6.3 Soil Sampling for Microbial Analyses (John Brooks)

Chapter 2.6.4 Microbiological Sampling of Wastewater and Biosolids

Volume III - Environmental Public Health Microbiology (Volume Editor:Marylynn V. Yates)

Section 3.1 Water (Section Editor:Gary Toranzos)

Chapter 3.1.1 Detection of Microbial Indicators in Environmental Freshwaters and Drinking Waters (Tasha M. Santiago-Rodriguez, Julie Kinzelman, Gary A. Toranzos)

Chapter 3.1.2 Best Practices for Cyanobacterial Harmful Algal Bloom Monitoring(Timothy G. Otten, Hans W. Paerl)

Chapter 3.1.3 Assessing the Efficiency of Wastewater Treatment (Graciela I. Ramírez toro, Harvey Minnigh)

Chapter 3.1.4 Epidemiologic Aspects of Waterborne Infectious Disease (Samuel Dorevitch)

Chapter 3.1.5 Waterborne Enteric Viruses: Diversity, Distribution and Detection(MortezaAbbaszadegan, Absar Alum)

Chapter 3.1.6 Detection of Protozoa in Surface and Finished Waters (Absar Alum, Eric N. Villegas, Scott P. Keely, Kelly R. Bright, Laura Y. Sifuentes, Morteza Abbaszadegan)

Chapter 3.1.7 Drinking Water Microbiology

Section 3.2 Aerobiology (Section Editor: Mark P. Buttner)

Chapter 3.2.1 Introduction to aerobiology (Paula Krauter, Linda D. Stetzenbach)

Chapter 3.2.2 - Sampling for Airborne Microorganisms (Sergey A. Frinshpun, Mark P. Buttner, Gediminas Mainelis, Klaus Willeke)

Chapter 3.2.3 - Analysis of Bioaerosol Samples(Patricia Cruz, Mark P. Buttner)

Chapter 3.2.4 - Fate and Transport of Microorganisms in Air (Gary S. Brown, Alan Jeff Mohr)

Chapter 3.2.5 - Airborne Fungi and Mycotoxins (De-Wei Li, Eckardt Johanning, Chin S. Yang)

Chapter 3.2.6 - Airborne Bacteria and Endotoxin (Peter S. Thorne, Caroline Duchaine, Pascale Blais Lecours)

Chapter 3.2.7 - Airborne Viruses (Syed A. Sattar, Nitin Bhardwaj, M. Khalid Ijaz)

Chapter 3.2.8 - Aerobiology of Agricultural Pathogens (Estelle Levetin)

Chapter 3.2.9 - Legionellae and Legionnaires' Disease (Claressa E. Lucas)

Section 3.3 Soil (Section Editor:Ed Topp)

Chapter 3.3.1 Pathogenic Viruses and Protozoa Transmitted by Soil (Pascal Delaquis, Julie Brassard, Alvin Gajadhar)

Chapter 3.3.2 - Natural soil reservoirs for human pathogenic and fecal indicatorbacteria(Maria Laura Boschiroli, Joseph Falkinham, Sabine Favre-Bonté, Sylvie Nazaret, Pascal Piveteau, Michael Sadowsky, Murulee Byappanahalli, Pascal Delaquis, Alain Hartmann)

Section 3.4 Microbial Source Tracking (Section Editor:Valerie J. Harwood)

Chapter 3.4.1 The Evolving Science of Microbial Source Tracking (Valerie J. Harwood, Charles Hagedorn, Michael Sadowsky)

Chapter 3.4.2 Validation of microbial source tracking markers and detection protocols: considerations for effective interpretation (Asja Korajkic, Don Stoeckel, John F. Griffith)

Chapter 3.4.3 Overview of Microbial Source Tracking Methods Targeting Human Fecal Pollution Sources (Orin C. Shanks, Hyatt Green, Asja Korajkic, Katharine G. Field)

Chapter 3.4.4 Methods of targeting animal sources of fecal pollution in water (Anicet R Blanch, Elisenda Ballesté, Jennifer Weidhaas, Jorge Santo Domingo, Hodon Ryu)

Chapter 3.4.5 MST: Field Study Planning and Implementation (Julie Kinzelman, Warish Ahmed)

Chapter 3.4.6 - Fecal Indicator Organism Monitoring and Microbial Source Tracking in Environmental Waters: Overview of Existing Modeling Efforts (Meredith B. Nevers, Muruleedhara N. Byappanahalli, Mantha S. Phanikumar, and Richard L. Whitman)

Section 3.5 Microbial Risk Assessment (Section Editor:Marylynn V. Yates)

Chapter 3.5.1 Dose Response Modeling and UseChallenges and Uncertainties in Environmental Exposure (Mark H. Weir)

Chapter 3.5.2 Exposure assessment (Susan Petterson, Nicholas Ashbolt)

Chapter 3.5.3 Dose-Response Modeling and Use: Challenges and Uncertainties in Environmental Exposure (Mark H. Weir)

Volume IV Microbial Ecology (Volume Editor:Robert V. Miller)

Section 4.1 Theory (Section Editor:Larry Forney)

Chapter 4.1.1 Phylogenomic Networks of Microbial Genome Evolution (Tal Dagan, Ovidiu Popa, Thorsten Klösges, Giddy Landan)

Chapter 4.1.2 Evolutionary ecology of microorganisms: from the tamed to the wild (Jay T. Lennon, Vincent J. Denef)

Section 4.2 Aquatic Environments (Section Editor:Robert H. Findlay)

Chapter 4.2.1 The Microbial Ecology of Benthic Environments (Robert H. Findlay, Tom J. Battin)

Chapter 4.2.2 Heterotrophic Planktonic Microbes: Viruses, Bacteria, Archaea, and Protozoa (Jed A. Fuhrman, David A. Caron)

Chapter 4.2.3 Aquatic Biofilms: Development, cultivation, analyses, and applications (John R. Lawrence, Thomas R. Neu, Armelle Paule, Darren R. Korber, Gideon M. Wolfaardt)

Section 4.3 Extreme Environments (Section Editor:Brian Hedlund)

Chapter 4.3.1 The Microbiology of Extremely Acidic Environments (D. Barrie Johnson, Angeles Aguilera)

Chapter 4.3.2 Life in High Salinity Environments (Aharon Oren)

Chapter 4.3.3 Microbial life in extreme low-biomass environments a molecular approach (Kasthuri Venkateswaran, Myron T. La Duc, Parag Vaishampayan, James A. Spry)

Chapter 4.3.4 Life in High-Temperature Environments (Brian Hedlund, Scott Thomas, Jeremy Dodsworth, Chuanlun Zhang)

Section 4.4 - Animal-Gut Microbiomes (Section Editor:Julian Marchesi)

Chapter 4.4.1 - Invertebrate-gut associations (Daniele Daffonchio, Alberto Alma, Guido Favia, Luciano Sacchi, Claudio Bandi)

Chapter 4.4.2 - Studying the mammalian intestinal microbiome using animal models (Floor Hugenholtz, Jing Zhang, Paul W. OToole, Hauke Smidt)

Chapter 4.4.3 - Animal Gut Microbiomes (Richard J Ellis, Chris McSweeney)

Volume V Biodegradation and Biotransformation (Volume Editor:Cindy H. Nakatsu)

Section 5.1 Biodegradation (Section Editor:Cindy H. Nakatsu)

Chapter 5.1.1 - Genomic Features and Genome-Wide analyses of Dioxin-Like Compound Degraders (Masaki Shintani and Kazuhide Kimbara)

Chapter 5.1.2 - Biodegradation of organochlorine pesticides (Yuji Nagata, Michiro Tabata, Yoshiyuki Ohtsubo, Masataka Tsuda)

Chapter 5.1.3 Anaerobic degradation of aromatic compounds (Weimin Sun, Valdis Krumins, Donna E. Fennell, Lee J. Kerkhof, Max M. Häggblom)

Chapter 5.1.4 Microbial electrochemical technologies producing electricity and valuable chemicals from biodegradation of waste organic matters (Taeho Lee, Akihiro Okamoto, Sokhee Jung, Ryuhei Nakamura, Jung Rae Kim, Kazuya Watanabe, Kazuhito Hashimoto)

Chapter 5.1.5 - A basic introduction to aerobic biodegradation of petroleum aromatic compounds (Kengo Inoue, Onruthai Pinyakong, Kano Kasuga, Hideaki Nojiri)

Chapter 5.1.6 - Environmental systems microbiology of contaminated environments (Terry C. Hazen, Gary S. Sayler)

Section 5.2 Biotransformation (Section Editor:Chris Rensing)

Chapter 5.2.1 Breathing Iron: Molecular Mechanism of Microbial Iron Reduction by Shewanella oneidensis (Rebecca E. Cooper, Jennifer L. Goff, Ben C. Reed, Ramanan Sekar, Thomas J. DiChristina)

Chapter 5.2.2 Experimental Geomicrobiology: From Field to Laboratory (Timothy S. Magnuson, Rhesa N. Ledbetter)

Chapter 5.2.3 - Restoration of Metal(loid) Contaminated Soils (Timberley Roane, Munira Lantz)

Index

Informationen zu E-Books

„E-Book“ steht für digitales Buch. Um diese Art von Büchern lesen zu können wird entweder eine spezielle Software für Computer, Tablets und Smartphones oder ein E-Book Reader benötigt. Da viele verschiedene Formate (Dateien) für E-Books existieren, gilt es dabei, einiges zu beachten.
Von uns werden digitale Bücher in drei Formaten ausgeliefert. Die Formate sind EPUB mit DRM (Digital Rights Management), EPUB ohne DRM und PDF. Bei den Formaten PDF und EPUB ohne DRM müssen Sie lediglich prüfen, ob Ihr E-Book Reader kompatibel ist. Wenn ein Format mit DRM genutzt wird, besteht zusätzlich die Notwendigkeit, dass Sie einen kostenlosen Adobe® Digital Editions Account besitzen. Wenn Sie ein E-Book, das Adobe® Digital Editions benötigt herunterladen, erhalten Sie eine ASCM-Datei, die zu Digital Editions hinzugefügt und mit Ihrem Account verknüpft werden muss. Einige E-Book Reader (zum Beispiel PocketBook Touch) unterstützen auch das direkte Eingeben der Login-Daten des Adobe Accounts – somit können diese ASCM-Dateien direkt auf das betreffende Gerät kopiert werden.
Da E-Books nur für eine begrenzte Zeit – in der Regel 6 Monate – herunterladbar sind, sollten Sie stets eine Sicherheitskopie auf einem Dauerspeicher (Festplatte, USB-Stick oder CD) vorsehen. Auch ist die Menge der Downloads auf maximal 5 begrenzt.