Research: Developing electrochemical sensors for fungal pathogens
Helping to protect amphibian species threatened by devastating Chytrid infection through a new cheap and easy-to-use detection process.
Summary
Statistic
The loss of biodiversity caused by Chytrid is among the worst attributable to any pathogen. It is linked to the decline of more than 500 amphibian species, of which 90 are confirmed or presumed extinct in the wild. A further 124 species have lost more than 90% of their populations, it is estimated.
The loss of biodiversity caused by Chytrid is among the worst attributable to any pathogen. It is linked to the decline of more than 500 amphibian species, of which 90 are confirmed or presumed extinct in the wild. A further 124 species have lost more than 90% of their populations, it is estimated.
Outputs
Team
Funding
With funding from
BBSRC
Contact
Contact us
For general enquiries about our Applied and Environmental Microbiology research group, you can contact its lead Dr Andrew Dean.