|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
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.
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.
|
|