G
Georg H. Reischer
Researcher at Vienna University of Technology
Publications - 64
Citations - 2714
Georg H. Reischer is an academic researcher from Vienna University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Water quality & TaqMan. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 63 publications receiving 2184 citations. Previous affiliations of Georg H. Reischer include Medical University of Vienna & IFA Tulln.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Host diet and evolutionary history explain different aspects of gut microbiome diversity among vertebrate clades
Nicholas D. Youngblut,Georg H. Reischer,William A. Walters,Nathalie Schuster,Chris Walzer,Gabrielle Stalder,Ruth E. Ley,Andreas H. Farnleitner,Andreas H. Farnleitner +8 more
TL;DR: The authors isolate evolutionary and ecological drivers of gut microbiomes from wild mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish to provide a robust assessment of the processes driving microbial community assembly in the vertebrate intestine.
Journal ArticleDOI
Bacterial diversity along a 2600 km river continuum
Domenico Savio,Lucas Sinclair,Umer Zeeshan Ijaz,Juraj Parajka,Georg H. Reischer,Georg H. Reischer,Philipp Stadler,Alfred Paul Blaschke,Günter Blöschl,Robert L. Mach,Alexander K. T. Kirschner,Andreas H. Farnleitner,Andreas H. Farnleitner,Alexander Eiler +13 more
TL;DR: A comprehensive dataset detailing the bacterioplankton diversity along the midstream of the Danube River and its tributaries is presented, revealing that bacterial richness and evenness gradually declined downriver in both the free‐living and particle‐associated bacterial communities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Quantitative PCR Method for Sensitive Detection of Ruminant Fecal Pollution in Freshwater and Evaluation of This Method in Alpine Karstic Regions
TL;DR: A quantitative TaqMan minor-groove binder real-time PCR assay was developed for the sensitive detection of a ruminant-specific genetic marker in fecal members of the phylum Bacteroidetes.
Journal ArticleDOI
A quantitative real-time PCR assay for the highly sensitive and specific detection of human faecal influence in spring water from a large alpine catchment area.
TL;DR: The assay detects human‐specific faecal DNA markers (BacH) from 16S rRNA gene sequences from the phylum Bacteroidetes using TaqMan® minor groove binder probes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Performance of human fecal anaerobe-associated PCR-based assays in a multi-laboratory method evaluation study
Blythe A. Layton,Yiping Cao,Darcy L. Ebentier,Kaitlyn T. Hanley,Elisenda Ballesté,João Brandão,Muruleedhara N. Byappanahalli,Reagan R. Converse,Reagan R. Converse,Andreas H. Farnleitner,Jennifer Gentry-Shields,Maribeth L. Gidley,Michèle Gourmelon,Chang-Soo Lee,Jiyoung Lee,Solen Lozach,Tania Madi,Wim G. Meijer,Rachel T. Noble,Lindsay Peed,Georg H. Reischer,Raquel Rodrigues,Joan B. Rose,Alexander Schriewer,Chris Sinigalliano,Sangeetha Srinivasan,Jill R. Stewart,Laurie C. Van De Werfhorst,Dan Wang,Richard L. Whitman,Stefan Wuertz,Stefan Wuertz,Jenny Jay,Patricia A. Holden,Alexandria B. Boehm,Orin C. Shanks,John F. Griffith +36 more
TL;DR: Overall, HF183 Taqman(®) was found to be the most effective marker of human fecal contamination in this California-based study.