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Practical Atlas for Bacterial Identification, Second Edition
By
D. Roy Cullimore[ندعوك للتسجيل في المنتدى أو التعريف بنفسك لمعاينة هذه الصورة]
- Publisher: CRC Press
- Number Of Pages: 327
- Publication Date: 2010-04-01
- ISBN-10 / ASIN: 1420087975
- ISBN-13 / EAN: 9781420087970
Product Description Published nearly ten years ago, the first edition of
Practical Atlas for Bacterial Identification broke new ground with the wealth of detail and breadth of information
it provided. The second edition is poised to do the same. Differing
fundamentally from the first edition, this book begins by introducing
the concept of bacteria community intelligence as reflected in
corrosion, plugging, and shifts in the quality parameters in the product
whether it be water, gas, oil, or even air. It presents a new
classification system for bacterial communities based upon their effect
and activities, and not their composition
The book represents a radical departure from the classical
reductionist identification of bacteria dominated by genetic and
biochemical analyses of separated strains. The author takes a holistic
approach based on form, function, and habitat of communities (consorms)
of bacteria in real environments. He uses factors related to the
oxidation-reduction potential at the site where the consorm is active
and the viscosity of the bound water within that consorm to position
their community structures within a two-dimensional bacteriological
positioning system (BPS) that then allows the functional role to be
defined. This book has an overarching ability to define bacterial
activities as consorms in a very effective and applied manner useful to
an applied audience involved in bacterial challenges
Organized for ease of use, the book allows readers to start with the
symptom, uncover the bacterial activities, and then indentify the
communities distinctly enough to allow management and control practices
that minimize the damage. The broad spectrum approach, new to this
edition, lumps compatible bacteria together into a relatively harmonious
consortia that share a common primary purpose. It gives a big picture
view of the role of bacteria not as single strains but collectively as
communities and uses this
information to provide key answers to common bacterial problems
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