Fr. 188.00

Chemical and Physical Signatures for Microbial Forensics

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 2 to 3 weeks (title will be printed to order)

Description

Read more

Combining the disciplines of biological, physical and chemical science, microbial forensics has a rapidly rising profile in a world increasingly troubled by the threat of 'biocrime' and 'bioterrorism'. This valuable resource is a major addition to a body of literature reckoned to lack sufficient breadth. It presents a variety of phenotypic and trace signature methodologies associated with cultured microorganisms that, despite being genetically identical, may be characterized by differing cultural environments.

One of the central challenges faced by those working in this field is the sheer diversity of potentially harmful agents, which in themselves total more than 1000 viruses, bacteria, fungi and protozoan parasites. Their numerous additional variants render the process of 'fingerprinting' biological agents notoriously difficult, especially when the limitations of genetic analysis are factored in. Attribution of crime is relatively easy through human DNA, but lacking the genetic individuation of humans and animals, microbial forensics has to complement phylogenetic techniques with chemical and physical ones.

In the best case, genetic analysis in the 'biocrime' sector can exclude sources, narrow the population of possible sources and support associations with potential sources. To complement these genetic techniques, chemical and physical methods can be used to compare 'signatures' imparted to microbial samples by environments in which they are grown and processed. Collating a range of microbiological fingerprinting techniques in one volume, and covering everything from statistical analysis to laboratory protocols, this publication furthers the aim of forensic investigators who need robust and legally admissible forensic evidence to present in a courtroom.

List of contents

State of Microbial Forensics and Future Directions.- Statistical Foundations and Data Integration for Microbial Forensics.- The Microbe: The Basics of Structure, Morphology, and Physiology as They Relate to Microbial Characterization and Attribution.- Fatty Acids and Lipids.- Carbohydrate Markers of Organism Purity and Growth Environment.- Glycoprotein and Protein Markers for Strain Differentiation and Growth Environment or Media Attribution.- Elemental Signatures for Microbial Forensics.- Stable Isotope Signatures for Microbial Forensics.- Extracellular Signatures as Indicators of Process Methods.- Quality Assurance Standards for Forensic Analysis of Evidence.

Summary

Combining the disciplines of biological, physical and chemical science, microbial forensics has a rapidly rising profile in a world increasingly troubled by the threat of ‘biocrime’ and ‘bioterrorism’. This valuable resource is a major addition to a body of literature reckoned to lack sufficient breadth. It presents a variety of phenotypic and trace signature methodologies associated with cultured microorganisms that, despite being genetically identical, may be characterized by differing cultural environments.
 
One of the central challenges faced by those working in this field is the sheer diversity of potentially harmful agents, which in themselves total more than 1000 viruses, bacteria, fungi and protozoan parasites. Their numerous additional variants render the process of ‘fingerprinting’ biological agents notoriously difficult, especially when the limitations of genetic analysis are factored in. Attribution of crime is relatively easy through human DNA, but lacking the genetic individuation of humans and animals, microbial forensics has to complement phylogenetic techniques with chemical and physical ones.
 
In the best case, genetic analysis in the ‘biocrime’ sector can exclude sources, narrow the population of possible sources and support associations with potential sources. To complement these genetic techniques, chemical and physical methods can be used to compare ‘signatures’ imparted to microbial samples by environments in which they are grown and processed. Collating a range of microbiological fingerprinting techniques in one volume, and covering everything from statistical analysis to laboratory protocols, this publication furthers the aim of forensic investigators who need robust and legally admissible forensic evidence to present in a courtroom.

Product details

Assisted by John B. Cliff (Editor), Christopher J. Ehrhardt (Editor), Christopher J Ehrhardt et al (Editor), Helen W. Kreuzer (Editor), Helen Kreuzer-Martin (Editor), Hele W Kreuzer (Editor), Helen W Kreuzer (Editor), David S. Wunschel (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2012
 
EAN 9781603272179
ISBN 978-1-60327-217-9
No. of pages 138
Weight 425 g
Illustrations XI, 138 p.
Series Infectious Disease
Infectious Disease
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > General, dictionaries

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.