Department of Environmental & Aquatic Animal Health - Research
Programs & Projects
Environmental Microbiology
Introduction
Research in environmental microbiology focuses on microorganisms and
microbially-mediated processes that occur in estuaries and watersheds. These interests include the ecology of autochthonous bacteria and viruses
in estuarine waters, emphasizing indicators of fecal contamination to assess health risk in shellfish growing and
recreational marine waters and their application to identify sources of contamination within watersheds. The role
of microorganisms in disease syndromes such as fish ulceration attributed to Pfiesteria or other causes and bivalve
diseases are investigated.
Research
Research efforts evaluate the validity and ecology of microorganisms as indicators of sewage or fecal
contamination and cultural, immunological, and molecular methods for their detection and enumeration. Other research interests
include nitrification, microbial degradation of xenobiotic compounds and petroleum hydrocarbons, processes within
watersheds that affect the microbial ecology of receiving waters, bacterial pathogens and disease processes of
shellfish and finfish, and the ecology of naturally occurring viruses. Microbiological problems relevant to state and
national interests and of regulatory or resource management significance are commonly addressed.
Principle investigator
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