R
Rosa Margesin
Researcher at University of Innsbruck
Publications - 150
Citations - 11833
Rosa Margesin is an academic researcher from University of Innsbruck. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bioremediation & Biodegradation. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 147 publications receiving 10649 citations.
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Methods in soil biology.
TL;DR: Methods in soil biology , Methods in soil Biology , مرکز فناوری اطلاعات £1,000,000 to £1,500,000 (US$2,400,000) is suggested for the total cost of the project to be in the range of $10m to $25m.
Journal ArticleDOI
Potential of halotolerant and halophilic microorganisms for biotechnology.
Rosa Margesin,Franz Schinner +1 more
TL;DR: Halotolerant microorganisms play an essential role in food biotechnology for the production of fermented food and food supplements and the degradation or transformation of a range of organic pollutants and theproduction of alternative energy are other fields of applications of these groups of extremophiles.
Journal ArticleDOI
Biodegradation and bioremediation of hydrocarbons in extreme environments
Rosa Margesin,Franz Schinner +1 more
TL;DR: Hydrocarbon biodegradation in the presence of high salt concentrations is of interest for the bioremediation of oil-polluted salt marshes and industrial wastewaters, contaminated with aromatic hydrocarbons or with chlorinated hydro carbons.
Journal ArticleDOI
Monitoring of bioremediation by soil biological activities.
TL;DR: Inorganic nutrients stimulated hydrocarbon biodegradation but not all biological activities to a significant extent, and the residual hydrocarbon content correlated positively with soil respiration, biomass-C (substrate-induced respiration), and with activities of soil dehydrogenase, urease and catalase.
Journal ArticleDOI
Characterization of hydrocarbon-degrading microbial populations in contaminated and pristine Alpine soils
TL;DR: No correlation was found between the prevalence of hydrocarbon-degradative genotypes and biological activities (respiration, fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis, lipase activity) or numbers of culturable hydrocarbon -degrading soil microorganisms; there also was no correlation between the numbers of hydro carbon degraders and the contamination level.