Runaway eutrophication and climate change has made the monitoring and management of toxigenic organisms in the world’s bodies of water more urgent than ever. In order to influence public policy regarding the detection and quantification of those organisms, it is incumbent upon scientists to raise the awareness of policy makers concerning the increased occurrence of toxigenic cyanobacteria and the threats they pose. As molecular methods can handle many samples in short time and help identify toxigenic organisms, they are reliable, cost-effective tools available for tracking toxigenic cyanobacteria worldwide. This volume arms scientists with the tools they need to track toxigenicity in surface waters and food supplies and, hopefully, to develop new techniques for managing the spread of toxic cyanobacteria.
This handbook offers the first comprehensive treatment of molecular tools for monitoring toxigenic cyanobacteria. Growing out of the findings of the landmark European Cooperation in Science and Technology Cyanobacteria project (CYANOCOST), it provides detailed, practical coverage of the full array of available molecular tools and protocols, from water sampling, nucleic acid extraction, and downstream analysis—including PCR and qPCR based methods—to genotyping (DGGE), diagnostic microarrays, and community characterization using next-gen sequencing techniques.
This handbook is an indispensable working resource for scientists, lab technicians, and water management professionals and an excellent text/reference for graduate students and supervisors who use molecular tools. It will also be of great value to environmental health and protection officials and policy makers.
EDITED BY
RAINER KURMAYER, PhD, is an Associate Professor at the University of Innsbruck, Research Institute for Limnology, Mondsee, Austria.
KAARINA SIVONEN, PhD, is a Professor of Microbiology at the University of Helsinki, Finland.
ANNICK WILMOTTE, PhD, is a FRS-FNRS Research Associate at InBios – Center for Protein Engineering, University of Liège, Belgium.
NICO SALMASO, PhD, is Head of the Hydrobiology Unit of the Istituto Agrario di S. Michele All'Adige, Fondazione E. Mach (FEM), Trento, Italy.