Outline of heritage discourse and categorisation (tangible heritage variables).
\\n\\n
More than half of the publishers listed alongside IntechOpen (18 out of 30) are Social Science and Humanities publishers. IntechOpen is an exception to this as a leader in not only Open Access content but Open Access content across all scientific disciplines, including Physical Sciences, Engineering and Technology, Health Sciences, Life Science, and Social Sciences and Humanities.
\\n\\nOur breakdown of titles published demonstrates this with 47% PET, 31% HS, 18% LS, and 4% SSH books published.
\\n\\n“Even though ItechOpen has shown the potential of sci-tech books using an OA approach,” other publishers “have shown little interest in OA books.”
\\n\\nAdditionally, each book published by IntechOpen contains original content and research findings.
\\n\\nWe are honored to be among such prestigious publishers and we hope to continue to spearhead that growth in our quest to promote Open Access as a true pioneer in OA book publishing.
\\n\\n\\n\\n
\\n"}]',published:!0,mainMedia:{caption:"IntechOpen Maintains",originalUrl:"/media/original/113"}},components:[{type:"htmlEditorComponent",content:'
Simba Information has released its Open Access Book Publishing 2020 - 2024 report and has again identified IntechOpen as the world’s largest Open Access book publisher by title count.
\n\nSimba Information is a leading provider for market intelligence and forecasts in the media and publishing industry. The report, published every year, provides an overview and financial outlook for the global professional e-book publishing market.
\n\nIntechOpen, De Gruyter, and Frontiers are the largest OA book publishers by title count, with IntechOpen coming in at first place with 5,101 OA books published, a good 1,782 titles ahead of the nearest competitor.
\n\nSince the first Open Access Book Publishing report published in 2016, IntechOpen has held the top stop each year.
\n\n\n\nMore than half of the publishers listed alongside IntechOpen (18 out of 30) are Social Science and Humanities publishers. IntechOpen is an exception to this as a leader in not only Open Access content but Open Access content across all scientific disciplines, including Physical Sciences, Engineering and Technology, Health Sciences, Life Science, and Social Sciences and Humanities.
\n\nOur breakdown of titles published demonstrates this with 47% PET, 31% HS, 18% LS, and 4% SSH books published.
\n\n“Even though ItechOpen has shown the potential of sci-tech books using an OA approach,” other publishers “have shown little interest in OA books.”
\n\nAdditionally, each book published by IntechOpen contains original content and research findings.
\n\nWe are honored to be among such prestigious publishers and we hope to continue to spearhead that growth in our quest to promote Open Access as a true pioneer in OA book publishing.
\n\n\n\n
\n'}],latestNews:[{slug:"webinar-introduction-to-open-science-wednesday-18-may-1-pm-cest-20220518",title:"Webinar: Introduction to Open Science | Wednesday 18 May, 1 PM CEST"},{slug:"step-in-the-right-direction-intechopen-launches-a-portfolio-of-open-science-journals-20220414",title:"Step in the Right Direction: IntechOpen Launches a Portfolio of Open Science Journals"},{slug:"let-s-meet-at-london-book-fair-5-7-april-2022-olympia-london-20220321",title:"Let’s meet at London Book Fair, 5-7 April 2022, Olympia London"},{slug:"50-books-published-as-part-of-intechopen-and-knowledge-unlatched-ku-collaboration-20220316",title:"50 Books published as part of IntechOpen and Knowledge Unlatched (KU) Collaboration"},{slug:"intechopen-joins-the-united-nations-sustainable-development-goals-publishers-compact-20221702",title:"IntechOpen joins the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Publishers Compact"},{slug:"intechopen-signs-exclusive-representation-agreement-with-lsr-libros-servicios-y-representaciones-s-a-de-c-v-20211123",title:"IntechOpen Signs Exclusive Representation Agreement with LSR Libros Servicios y Representaciones S.A. de C.V"},{slug:"intechopen-expands-partnership-with-research4life-20211110",title:"IntechOpen Expands Partnership with Research4Life"},{slug:"introducing-intechopen-book-series-a-new-publishing-format-for-oa-books-20210915",title:"Introducing IntechOpen Book Series - A New Publishing Format for OA Books"}]},book:{item:{type:"book",id:"10746",leadTitle:null,fullTitle:"Prebiotics and Probiotics - From Food to Health",title:"Prebiotics and Probiotics",subtitle:"From Food to Health",reviewType:"peer-reviewed",abstract:"Currently, new health benefits of probiotics have been identified, and new strains with probiotic potential have been discovered and continue to be investigated. Likewise, prebiotics and their interaction with the microbiota have been the focus of research in human and animal health, as well as to counteract zoonotic pathogenic microorganisms. Probiotics and prebiotics can be found in food and are isolated or synthesized to be supplemented as functional ingredients for the benefit of humans or animals. The volume contains thirteen chapters that explain the mechanisms of probiotics, prebiotics, and symbiotics from their interaction with the intestinal microbiota as antimicrobials and immunomodulators and their effect on human and animal health.",isbn:"978-1-83969-576-6",printIsbn:"978-1-83969-575-9",pdfIsbn:"978-1-83969-577-3",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.94725",price:119,priceEur:129,priceUsd:155,slug:"prebiotics-and-probiotics-from-food-to-health",numberOfPages:254,isOpenForSubmission:!1,isInWos:null,isInBkci:!1,hash:"3ab2902c0d43605ab43cd0868542db95",bookSignature:"Elena Franco Robles",publishedDate:"April 6th 2022",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/10746.jpg",numberOfDownloads:1515,numberOfWosCitations:0,numberOfCrossrefCitations:2,numberOfCrossrefCitationsByBook:0,numberOfDimensionsCitations:2,numberOfDimensionsCitationsByBook:0,hasAltmetrics:1,numberOfTotalCitations:4,isAvailableForWebshopOrdering:!0,dateEndFirstStepPublish:"February 24th 2021",dateEndSecondStepPublish:"March 23rd 2021",dateEndThirdStepPublish:"May 22nd 2021",dateEndFourthStepPublish:"August 10th 2021",dateEndFifthStepPublish:"October 9th 2021",currentStepOfPublishingProcess:5,indexedIn:"1,2,3,4,5,6",editedByType:"Edited by",kuFlag:!1,featuredMarkup:null,editors:[{id:"219102",title:"Dr.",name:"Elena",middleName:null,surname:"Franco-Robles",slug:"elena-franco-robles",fullName:"Elena Franco-Robles",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/219102/images/system/219102.jpg",biography:"Dr. Elena Franco-Robles has an MMSc and DMSc from the Department of Medical Sciences, University of Guanajuato, Mexico. She also has a BS in Pharmaceutical Chemistry from the Faculty of Chemistry at the same university. She completed a post-doctorate in Biochemistry and Biotechnology at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies of the National Polytechnic Institute (CINVESTAV-IPN). In recent years, she has published more than fifteen scientific articles in international indexed and peer-reviewed journals on in vitro and in vivo studies, mainly in laboratory animals, which have been widely cited. She has been an evaluator of scientific articles and manuscripts for various international scientific publishers. The line of research that she develops is multidisciplinary in the areas of animal health, mucosal immunology, clinical diagnosis, and functional ingredients. She has collaborated with various educational institutions and research centers, as well as with the industrial sector. Dr. Franco has taught various courses and seminars and has participated in various national and international scientific conferences. Likewise, she has advised various students for the development and completion of bachelor\\'s degrees, Master of Science degrees, and Doctor of Science theses in the health discipline.",institutionString:"Universidad de Guanajuato",position:null,outsideEditionCount:0,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"1",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"2",institution:{name:"Universidad de Guanajuato",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Mexico"}}}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,coeditorOne:null,coeditorTwo:null,coeditorThree:null,coeditorFour:null,coeditorFive:null,topics:[{id:"389",title:"Food Microbiology",slug:"biochemistry-genetics-and-molecular-biology-bromatology-food-microbiology"}],chapters:[{id:"78712",title:"Mucosal Immunology",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.98863",slug:"mucosal-immunology",totalDownloads:106,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Approximately 80% of the pathogens that lead to deadly infections in humans choose mucosal tissue as the first site of infection. The mucosal surfaces of the body include the gastrointestinal tract, airways, oral cavity, and urogenital mucosa, which provide a large area conducive to the invasion and accumulation of many microorganisms and are of great importance in this regard. The large extent of mucus, as well as the accumulation of bacteria and countless foreign antigens in these areas, are the most important reasons for the importance of mucosal tissues. In addition to the myriad of symbiotic bacteria, large amounts of oral antigens (both pathogenic and non-pathogenic) enter a person’s body daily and human mucosal tissues are exposed to these antigens. The function of the mucosal immune system is to distinguish pathogenic antigens from non-pathogenic ones. In this way, against a large number of oral antigens or co-tolerant microorganisms, and pathogenic antigens, a favorable (and even non-inflammatory, possible) immune response is produced. Mucosal tissue, as the largest lymphatic organ in the body, is home to 75% of the lymphocyte population and produces the highest amount of immunoglobulin. The amount of secreted IgA (slgA) produced daily by mucosal surfaces is much higher than the IgG produced in the bloodstream. A 70 kg person produces more than 3 grams of IgA per day, which is about 70–60% of the total antibodies produced in the body. The first embryonic organ in which immune system cells are located in the intestine. Some researchers consider this organ (and specifically mucosal lymph nodes) to be the source of the human immune system.",signatures:"Saeed Sepehrnia",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/78712",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/78712",authors:[{id:"344001",title:"M.Sc.",name:"Saeed",surname:"Sepehrnia",slug:"saeed-sepehrnia",fullName:"Saeed Sepehrnia"}],corrections:null},{id:"77597",title:"Probiotic: An Uprising Human Health Concept",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.98828",slug:"probiotic-an-uprising-human-health-concept",totalDownloads:131,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Most of our gut microbiota live with us in a mutually beneficial life-long relationship. The gut microbiota plays a vital role in the host’s overall health through its metabolic activities. Human microbiota might be supported by consuming friendly bacteria (probiotics) and consuming foods to improve the microbiota (prebiotics). During the last two decades, probiotics’ interest has increased with rising scientific shreds of evidence of benefits on human health. Hence, they have been exploited as various food products, mainly fermented foods. Probiotics as a treatment modality may restore normal microbiota and functioning of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Strong scientific evidence is associating these bacteria with the prevention and therapy of various GI disorders. (In light of the ongoing trend of probiotics, further research is needed to obtain the perspective of potential applications for better health. Probiotic applications have been extended from health applications to food and agricultural applications. The benefits of probiotics led to its applications in probiotic ‘health food’ industries and agricultural sectors.",signatures:"Amishi Bhatt, Dhyey Kothari, Charmy Kothari and Ramesh Kothari",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/77597",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/77597",authors:[{id:"278193",title:"Prof.",name:"Ramesh",surname:"Kothari",slug:"ramesh-kothari",fullName:"Ramesh Kothari"},{id:"353395",title:"Ms.",name:"Amishi",surname:"Bhatt",slug:"amishi-bhatt",fullName:"Amishi Bhatt"},{id:"353396",title:"Dr.",name:"Charmy",surname:"Kothari",slug:"charmy-kothari",fullName:"Charmy Kothari"},{id:"426628",title:"Dr.",name:"Dhyey",surname:"Kothari",slug:"dhyey-kothari",fullName:"Dhyey Kothari"}],corrections:null},{id:"77517",title:"The Immunomodulatory Role of Probiotics",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.98839",slug:"the-immunomodulatory-role-of-probiotics",totalDownloads:21,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Probiotics are particularly beneficial living microorganisms that help improve human health. Although probiotics have long been used as nutritional supplements in various cultures around the world, new research has investigated their antimicrobial and immune boosting effects in individuals. Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium are popular probiotics used worldwide that benefit human health by acting as antibacterial, antiviral, and antifungal agents, reducing pathogen binding to the host receptor and thus capturing pathogenic microorganisms. Probiotics have been shown to be beneficial in a variety of bacterial and viral diseases worldwide. The regulation of the host’s immune response is one of the most important mechanisms of probiotic action. Immunomodulatory effects of probiotic-derived compounds have been characterized using genomic and proteomic analysis. These compounds have the ability to regulate and initiate mucosal immunity against various diseases. Probiotics produce many bactericidal compounds, which inhibit the growth of pathogenic microorganisms and their toxins, promoting the sustainability and structural integrity of enterocytes. This chapter focused on recent scientific research findings that help us better understand how probiotics regulate the host immune response and how they can be used to prevent and treat disease and there beneficial role to improve the health status of individuals.",signatures:"Faisal Siddique, Kashif Akram, Etab Saleh Alghamdi, Qandeel Arshad and Ayesha Siddique",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/77517",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/77517",authors:[{id:"353526",title:"Assistant Prof.",name:"Faisal",surname:"Siddique",slug:"faisal-siddique",fullName:"Faisal Siddique"},{id:"419617",title:"Prof.",name:"Kashif",surname:"Akram",slug:"kashif-akram",fullName:"Kashif Akram"},{id:"419618",title:"Prof.",name:"Etab Saleh",surname:"Alghamdi",slug:"etab-saleh-alghamdi",fullName:"Etab Saleh Alghamdi"},{id:"419619",title:"Dr.",name:"Qandeel",surname:"Arshad",slug:"qandeel-arshad",fullName:"Qandeel Arshad"},{id:"419620",title:"Ms.",name:"Ayesha",surname:"Siddique",slug:"ayesha-siddique",fullName:"Ayesha Siddique"}],corrections:null},{id:"77667",title:"Probiotics as Potential Antimicrobials for the Treatment of Infections: Current Reality or Remote Future?",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.98865",slug:"probiotics-as-potential-antimicrobials-for-the-treatment-of-infections-current-reality-or-remote-fut",totalDownloads:159,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Probiotics are microorganisms that live in symbiosis with the human body. The intake of probiotics in adequate amounts can improve biological functions bringing improvements in the health of the host. Many studies have demonstrated the indisputable antimicrobial activity of probiotics and their potential for an alternative treatment of infections. Nevertheless, the forms of encapsulation, as well as clinical trials on the clinical use of these microorganisms as a recognized and well-established protocol, are still incipient. In this chapter, we provide a general approach to the topic and point to future directions in the probiotics field for this purpose. Moreover, microbial resistance is a current public health problem and the search for new therapeutic alternatives is urgent. Probiotics and other natural therapies have been considered very promising. The approaches of future research should focus mainly on the isolation of new probiotic microorganisms, the definition of inoculum, forms of encapsulation for controlled delivery, and clinical trials for the definition of doses and mechanism of action in the fight against infections.",signatures:"Diego Romario-Silva, Otavio Akira Souza Sakaguchi, Andrea Cristina Barbosa da Silva, Janaína Orlandi Sardi, Rafaela Parolina de Carvalho, Sindy Magri Roque, Lincoln Pires Silva Borges, Rodrigo Barros Esteves Lins, Letícia Targino Campos and Edja Maria Melo de Brito Costa",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/77667",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/77667",authors:[{id:"115449",title:"Prof.",name:"Andréa",surname:"Cristina Barbosa da Silva",slug:"andrea-cristina-barbosa-da-silva",fullName:"Andréa Cristina Barbosa da Silva"},{id:"173419",title:"Dr.",name:"Diego",surname:"Romario-Silva",slug:"diego-romario-silva",fullName:"Diego Romario-Silva"},{id:"420028",title:"Dr.",name:"Edja",surname:"Maria Melo de Brito Costa",slug:"edja-maria-melo-de-brito-costa",fullName:"Edja Maria Melo de Brito Costa"},{id:"420029",title:"Ms.",name:"Letícia",surname:"Targino Campos",slug:"leticia-targino-campos",fullName:"Letícia Targino Campos"},{id:"420030",title:"Dr.",name:"Rodrigo",surname:"Barros Esteves Lins",slug:"rodrigo-barros-esteves-lins",fullName:"Rodrigo Barros Esteves Lins"},{id:"420031",title:"MSc.",name:"Lincoln",surname:"Pires Silva Borges",slug:"lincoln-pires-silva-borges",fullName:"Lincoln Pires Silva Borges"},{id:"420032",title:"MSc.",name:"Sindy",surname:"Magri Roque",slug:"sindy-magri-roque",fullName:"Sindy Magri Roque"},{id:"420033",title:"MSc.",name:"Rafaela",surname:"Parolina de Carvalho",slug:"rafaela-parolina-de-carvalho",fullName:"Rafaela Parolina de Carvalho"},{id:"420034",title:"Dr.",name:"Janaína",surname:"Orlandi Sardi",slug:"janaina-orlandi-sardi",fullName:"Janaína Orlandi Sardi"},{id:"420035",title:"Mr.",name:"Otávio",surname:"Akira Souza Sakaguchi",slug:"otavio-akira-souza-sakaguchi",fullName:"Otávio Akira Souza Sakaguchi"}],corrections:null},{id:"78419",title:"Probiotics and Postbiotics from Food to Health: Antimicrobial Experimental Confirmation",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.99675",slug:"probiotics-and-postbiotics-from-food-to-health-antimicrobial-experimental-confirmation",totalDownloads:131,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"The field of probiotics is up-and-coming, especially in management of microbial pathogens. Probiotics confer nutritional benefits, reduce inflammation and infection. Probiotics have also shown to be helpful in the management of microbial pathogens, which include bacteria, fungi, and viruses. To ernes this potential maximumly, there is a need for an elaborate screening system for new isolates. This entails; rigorous screening methods and thorough confirmatory systems. There is need also to come up with standard methods used to evaluate the probiotics mechanism of action both in vivo and in vitro. In summary, there is a need for a standard screening process for probiotic microorganisms that is reproducible. The aim is to ensure that, the candidate microbial cultures are not written off without proper investigations. This will also fasten the screening process and save time and resources wasted in pre-screening experiments.",signatures:"Janet Cheruiyot Kosgey, Mercy W. Mwaniki and Fengmin Zhang",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/78419",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/78419",authors:[{id:"352735",title:"Dr.",name:"Janet",surname:"Cheruiyot Kosgey",slug:"janet-cheruiyot-kosgey",fullName:"Janet Cheruiyot Kosgey"},{id:"419977",title:"Dr.",name:"Mercy W.",surname:"Mwaniki",slug:"mercy-w.-mwaniki",fullName:"Mercy W. Mwaniki"},{id:"419978",title:"Prof.",name:"Fengmin",surname:"Zhang",slug:"fengmin-zhang",fullName:"Fengmin Zhang"}],corrections:null},{id:"78161",title:"Single Strain Probiotic Bifidobacteria Approach in Health and Non-Health Fields",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.99712",slug:"single-strain-probiotic-bifidobacteria-approach-in-health-and-non-health-fields",totalDownloads:128,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:1,abstract:"Single strain probiotic bifidobacteria approach is promising for the future in health and non-health fields. Recent studies show that intestinal lumen microbial content and tissue microbial content are different, so the personalized microbiome approach with the 16S rRNA analysis comes to the fore with the single strain probiotic bifidobacteria (BB-12,Infantis) approach. In addition to their immune modulation effect, they have beneficial effects such as preventing pathogens from binding to the intestinal mucosa via the biofilm layer they produce, and also their electrophysical properties in various atmospheric conditions, They have the ability to be used in non-health areas such as microplastic biodegradition, nanostructures, food and agriculture fields. The availability of single strain probiotic bifidobacteria in health, ecological and food systems are signs that progress in the single strain probiotic bacteria approach will be more accurate.",signatures:"Hüseyin Sancar Bozkurt and Havva Bozkurt",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/78161",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/78161",authors:[{id:"351014",title:"Assistant Prof.",name:"Hüseyin Sancar",surname:"Bozkurt",slug:"huseyin-sancar-bozkurt",fullName:"Hüseyin Sancar Bozkurt"},{id:"428846",title:"Dr.",name:"Havva",surname:"Bozkurt",slug:"havva-bozkurt",fullName:"Havva Bozkurt"}],corrections:null},{id:"76508",title:"Propionibacterium freudenreichii: General Characteristics and Probiotic Traits",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.97560",slug:"-em-propionibacterium-freudenreichii-em-general-characteristics-and-probiotic-traits",totalDownloads:334,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:1,abstract:"Propionibacterium freudenreichii is a Gram-positive dairy probiotic bacterial species that has been used as a ripening starter in the production of Swiss-type cheese for a long time. It has been exploited for the optimization of cheese production, including ripening capacities and aroma compounds production, but also for the production of vitamin B12 and organic acids. Furthermore, it has emerged in the probiotics landscape owing to several beneficial traits, including tolerance to stress in the gastrointestinal tract, adhesion to host cells, anti-pathogenic activity, anticancer potential and immunomodulatory properties. These beneficial properties have been confirmed with in vitro and in vivo investigations, using several omics approaches that allowed the identification of important molecular actors, such as surface proteins, short-chain fatty acids and bifidogenic factors. The diversity within the species was shown to be an important aspect to take into consideration, since many of these properties were strain-dependent. New studies should dive further into the molecular mechanisms related to the beneficial properties of this species and of its products, while considering the complexities of strain diversity and the interactions with the host and its microbiota. This chapter reviews current knowledge on the possible impact of P. freudenreichii on human health.",signatures:"Vinícius de Rezende Rodovalho, Diego Lucas Neres Rodrigues, Gwénaël Jan, Yves Le Loir, Vasco Ariston de Carvalho Azevedo and Eric Guédon",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/76508",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/76508",authors:[{id:"192132",title:"Dr.",name:"Vasco",surname:"Ariston de Carvalho Azevedo",slug:"vasco-ariston-de-carvalho-azevedo",fullName:"Vasco Ariston de Carvalho Azevedo"},{id:"344089",title:"Dr.",name:"Yves",surname:"Le-Loir",slug:"yves-le-loir",fullName:"Yves Le-Loir"},{id:"344090",title:"Dr.",name:"Eric",surname:"Guédon",slug:"eric-guedon",fullName:"Eric Guédon"},{id:"350693",title:"M.Sc.",name:"Vinícius",surname:"de Rezende Rodovalho",slug:"vinicius-de-rezende-rodovalho",fullName:"Vinícius de Rezende Rodovalho"},{id:"350695",title:"B.Sc.",name:"Diego Lucas Neres",surname:"Rodrigues",slug:"diego-lucas-neres-rodrigues",fullName:"Diego Lucas Neres Rodrigues"},{id:"350787",title:"Dr.",name:"Gwenaël",surname:"Jan",slug:"gwenael-jan",fullName:"Gwenaël Jan"}],corrections:null},{id:"79841",title:"Probiotics from Fermented Fish",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.101590",slug:"probiotics-from-fermented-fish",totalDownloads:58,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"The term ‘Probiotics’ is used to describe live microorganisms, which, when administered in adequate quantities, confer health benefits. The term probiotics was first introduced in 1965 by Lilly and Stillwell, who defined it to be microorganisms acting as growth promoters for other microorganisms. These microorganisms may include Lactobacillus, Streptococcus, Bifidobacterium, Saccharomyces, Aspergillus, Enterococcus etc., as well as a mixture of other microorganisms. The chapter focuses on providing a comprehensive and up-to-date review of probiotics that have been isolated from fermented fish-based products.",signatures:"Nilofar Yasmin, Khusboo Kaur and Kaushal Sood",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/79841",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/79841",authors:[{id:"320805",title:"Dr.",name:"Kaushal",surname:"Sood",slug:"kaushal-sood",fullName:"Kaushal Sood"},{id:"353469",title:"Ms.",name:"Nilofar",surname:"Yasmin",slug:"nilofar-yasmin",fullName:"Nilofar Yasmin"},{id:"427450",title:"Ms.",name:"Khushboo",surname:"Kaur",slug:"khushboo-kaur",fullName:"Khushboo Kaur"}],corrections:null},{id:"80249",title:"Food Health with Increased Probiotic Survival During Storage",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.99382",slug:"food-health-with-increased-probiotic-survival-during-storage",totalDownloads:65,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:1,abstract:"In recent years, due to the increasing concern of consumers about their food health. Pay attention to foods not only as a source of nutrients but also as promoters of health and wellness-hence the increase in demand for foods that have active or functional ingredients (especially natural ingredients). They increase nutritional value and nutritional health. Changes in food consumption, disorder the intestinal microbial system. Maintaining the health benefits of consuming beneficial bacteria that are present in the intestinal system. Probiotics are essential for improving intestinal microbial homeostasis. Probiotics are living microorganisms that, if recommended in sufficient quantities, can have positive effects on human health. Lowers cholesterol, improves lactose intolerance, increases nutritional value and prevents cancer. Probiotics are unstable during storage and the gastrointestinal tract (pH and bile salts). For this reason, the survival of probiotic cells and the absence of changes in the sensory properties of the product during storage are of have fundamental importance. Encapsulation and co-encapsulation with prebiotics are often a good way to increase the resistance of probiotic bacteria to difficult conditions and their survival. This leads to improved production of probiotic products and increased food health in the world.",signatures:"Fatemeh Shoaei",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/80249",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/80249",authors:[{id:"352143",title:"M.Sc.",name:"Fateme",surname:"Shoaei",slug:"fateme-shoaei",fullName:"Fateme Shoaei"}],corrections:null},{id:"78770",title:"Natural Probiotics and Nanomaterials: A New Functional Food",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.98984",slug:"natural-probiotics-and-nanomaterials-a-new-functional-food",totalDownloads:123,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Natural probiotics are functional foods with several biological properties and nutritional value inherent to their chemical composition and can play a potentially beneficial role in reducing the risk of chronic degenerative diseases. In order to improve the stability of these compounds, increase the encapsulating power, delay oxidation, increase their effectiveness, control their release and improve the bioavailability of their combination with nanomaterials is a potential tool in the food area enabling the development of new products with functional and nutraceutical characteristics. In addition, the study of nanomaterials in natural probiotics is rarely reported in the literature, being an area of paramount importance in the development of new functional foods. Therefore, in this chapter, a review of nanomaterials’ use in natural probiotics will be addressed to specify their advantages and methodologies of preparation and characterization.",signatures:"Ilza Fernanda Barboza Duarte, Naianny Lívia Oliveira Nascimento Mergulhão, Valdemir da Costa Silva, Laisa Carolina Gomes de Bulhões, Irinaldo Diniz Basílio Júnior and Anielle C.A. Silva",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/78770",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/78770",authors:[{id:"340051",title:"Prof.",name:"Anielle C.A.",surname:"Silva",slug:"anielle-c.a.-silva",fullName:"Anielle C.A. Silva"},{id:"420049",title:"MSc.",name:"Ilza Fernanda",surname:"Barboza Duarte",slug:"ilza-fernanda-barboza-duarte",fullName:"Ilza Fernanda Barboza Duarte"},{id:"420050",title:"Prof.",name:"Valdemir",surname:"da Costa Silva",slug:"valdemir-da-costa-silva",fullName:"Valdemir da Costa Silva"},{id:"420051",title:"MSc.",name:"Naianny Lívia Oliveira",surname:"Nascimento Mergulhão",slug:"naianny-livia-oliveira-nascimento-mergulhao",fullName:"Naianny Lívia Oliveira Nascimento Mergulhão"},{id:"420052",title:"MSc.",name:"Laisa Carolina",surname:"Gomes De Bulhões",slug:"laisa-carolina-gomes-de-bulhoes",fullName:"Laisa Carolina Gomes De Bulhões"},{id:"420053",title:"Prof.",name:"Irinaldo",surname:"Diniz Basílio Júnior",slug:"irinaldo-diniz-basilio-junior",fullName:"Irinaldo Diniz Basílio Júnior"}],corrections:null},{id:"78919",title:"Prebiotics, Probiotics and Synbiotic for Bone Health",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100525",slug:"prebiotics-probiotics-and-synbiotic-for-bone-health",totalDownloads:143,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Prebiotics, probiotics and synbiotics has been shown to enhance calcium absorption, gut and bone health. Probiotics are also known to ferment prebiotics to produce the fermentative substrates such as short chain fatty acids (SCFAs), mainly acetate, butyrate and propionate with the help of beneficial micro-organisms in the gut. The expression of these SCFAs has been associated with the inhibition of osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption both in vitro and in vivo. In this review, we discuss the benefits of SCFAs and ways in which prebiotics and probiotics affect bone health by the reduction of inflammation in the gut and the bone.",signatures:"Bolaji Lilian Ilesanmi-Oyelere and Marlena Cathorina Kruger",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/78919",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/78919",authors:[{id:"351673",title:"Dr.",name:"Bolaji",surname:"Lilian Ilesanmi-Oyelere",slug:"bolaji-lilian-ilesanmi-oyelere",fullName:"Bolaji Lilian Ilesanmi-Oyelere"},{id:"351674",title:"Prof.",name:"Marlena",surname:"Cathorina Kruger",slug:"marlena-cathorina-kruger",fullName:"Marlena Cathorina Kruger"}],corrections:null},{id:"78529",title:"The Domino Effects of Synbiotic: From Feed to Health",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.99733",slug:"the-domino-effects-of-synbiotic-from-feed-to-health",totalDownloads:100,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Around of 60,000 tons per year of antibiotics are consumed to produce our food through subtherapeutic dosage usage which aim is improve healthy and performance of animal in intensive system production. If the use of antibiotics allowed greater access to food, on the other hand, it allowed a selective pressure of antimicrobial resistant strains, the superbugs. Considered a worldwide public health problem, this ultimately led to the prohibition of antibiotics as growth enhancers in animal production and the synbiotic, prebiotic and probiotic, is claimed to be effective alternative to withdraw of antibiotics in poultry farm. Hence, in this chapter, an antimicrobial resistance, animal health regulatory affairs and synbiotic influences will be summarized. The results of scientific assays and field trials from our synbiotics commercial formulations will be described to concerning the effect of zootechnical performance and sanitary control in the poultry production.",signatures:"Flávia Pelá",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/78529",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/78529",authors:[{id:"352704",title:"Dr.",name:"Flávia",surname:"Pelá",slug:"flavia-pela",fullName:"Flávia Pelá"}],corrections:null},{id:"79018",title:"Benefits of Probiotics on Aflatoxin Infected Birds",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.99800",slug:"benefits-of-probiotics-on-aflatoxin-infected-birds",totalDownloads:17,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Aflatoxin are transferred from feed to animal products (Eggs, Meats and Milk). There is need to find alternative chemicals that is economically friendly to reduce the impact of aflatoxins. Probiotics additives especially Lactobacillus and Bacillus spp. biodegradation generally decreases aflatoxin residues in milk, egg and meat. They are low cost, economically friendly and accessible additives which could mitigate aflatoxin formation in feed and food. There is need for aggressive public health awareness on the implication of aflatoxin residues and as well as detoxification strategy that can reduce toxin absorption into animal feed.",signatures:"Muhammed Jimoh Ibrahim",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/79018",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/79018",authors:[{id:"352006",title:"Ph.D. Student",name:"Muhammed",surname:"Jimoh Ibrahim",slug:"muhammed-jimoh-ibrahim",fullName:"Muhammed Jimoh Ibrahim"}],corrections:null}],productType:{id:"1",title:"Edited Volume",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"},subseries:null,tags:null},relatedBooks:[{type:"book",id:"6967",title:"Prebiotics and Probiotics",subtitle:"Potential Benefits in Nutrition and Health",isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"11781d6b1c070edcf204518e632033be",slug:"prebiotics-and-probiotics-potential-benefits-in-nutrition-and-health",bookSignature:"Elena Franco-Robles and Joel 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Shishkovsky",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/6306.jpg",licenceType:"CC BY 3.0",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"178616",title:"Prof.",name:"Igor",middleName:"V.",surname:"Shishkovsky",slug:"igor-shishkovsky",fullName:"Igor Shishkovsky"}],productType:{id:"1",title:"Edited Volume",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},authors:[{id:"213235",title:"Prof.",name:"Saniya",middleName:null,surname:"LeBlanc",fullName:"Saniya LeBlanc",slug:"saniya-leblanc",email:"sleblanc@gwu.edu",position:null,institution:{name:"George Washington University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"213239",title:"Dr.",name:"Haidong",middleName:null,surname:"Zhang",fullName:"Haidong Zhang",slug:"haidong-zhang",email:"haidongzhang@email.gwu.edu",position:null,institution:{name:"George Washington University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United States of America"}}}]}},chapter:{id:"60707",slug:"processing-parameters-for-selective-laser-sintering-or-melting-of-oxide-ceramics",signatures:"Haidong Zhang and Saniya LeBlanc",dateSubmitted:"June 5th 2017",dateReviewed:"February 22nd 2018",datePrePublished:null,datePublished:"July 11th 2018",book:{id:"6306",title:"Additive Manufacturing of High-performance Metals and Alloys",subtitle:"Modeling and Optimization",fullTitle:"Additive Manufacturing of High-performance Metals and Alloys - Modeling and Optimization",slug:"additive-manufacturing-of-high-performance-metals-and-alloys-modeling-and-optimization",publishedDate:"July 11th 2018",bookSignature:"Igor V. Shishkovsky",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/6306.jpg",licenceType:"CC BY 3.0",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"178616",title:"Prof.",name:"Igor",middleName:"V.",surname:"Shishkovsky",slug:"igor-shishkovsky",fullName:"Igor Shishkovsky"}],productType:{id:"1",title:"Edited Volume",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},authors:[{id:"213235",title:"Prof.",name:"Saniya",middleName:null,surname:"LeBlanc",fullName:"Saniya LeBlanc",slug:"saniya-leblanc",email:"sleblanc@gwu.edu",position:null,institution:{name:"George Washington University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"213239",title:"Dr.",name:"Haidong",middleName:null,surname:"Zhang",fullName:"Haidong Zhang",slug:"haidong-zhang",email:"haidongzhang@email.gwu.edu",position:null,institution:{name:"George Washington University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United States of America"}}}]},book:{id:"6306",title:"Additive Manufacturing of High-performance Metals and Alloys",subtitle:"Modeling and Optimization",fullTitle:"Additive Manufacturing of High-performance Metals and Alloys - Modeling and Optimization",slug:"additive-manufacturing-of-high-performance-metals-and-alloys-modeling-and-optimization",publishedDate:"July 11th 2018",bookSignature:"Igor V. 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Biodiversity in ecosystems is tightly linked to ecosystem functions such as biomass production, organic matter decomposition, ecosystem resilience, and others. Many of these ecological processes are also directly implied in services that the humankind obtains from ecosystems. The first part of this book will introduce different concepts and theories important to understand the links between ecosystem function and ecosystem biodiversity. The second part of the book provides a wide range of different studies showcasing the evidence and practical implications of such relationships.",isbn:null,printIsbn:"978-953-51-2028-5",pdfIsbn:"978-953-51-4226-3",doi:"10.5772/58494",price:159,priceEur:175,priceUsd:205,slug:"biodiversity-in-ecosystems-linking-structure-and-function",numberOfPages:642,isOpenForSubmission:!1,isSalesforceBook:!1,hash:"d488928dfd93614e6a94950be7131fa0",bookSignature:"Yueh-Hsin Lo, Juan A. 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His work is focused on the development and evaluation of ecological models to simulate the influences of management, climate and other ecological factors on tree growth. He is currently collaborating with research teams from Canada, Taiwan, USA, Spain, Cuba, and China in using ecological models to explore the effects of climate change, atmospheric pollution and alternative forest practices in natural and planted forest in boreal, temperate and tropical forests. His research has been applied in mining to optimize reclamation plans, in forestry to assess the potential for carbon sequestration and by government agencies to define local guidelines for long-term sustainable forest management. Among other topics related to forest ecology, Dr. Blanco has studied the influence of climate variations on tree growth and estimated the possible ecological consequences of climate change in forest ecosystems. He has also co-authored the first book dedicated exclusively to the use of hybrid ecological models in forest management, entitled 'Forecasting Forest Futures” (Earthscan, London), edited three books on Climate Change effects, mitigation and adaptation (InTech, Rijeka), and three more on Forest Ecosystems, Biodiversity and Tropical Forests (InTech, Rijeka).",institutionString:null,position:null,outsideEditionCount:0,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"5",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"5",institution:{name:"Universidad Publica De Navarra",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Spain"}}}],coeditorOne:{id:"171181",title:"Dr.",name:"Yueh-Hsin",middleName:null,surname:"Lo",slug:"yueh-hsin-lo",fullName:"Yueh-Hsin Lo",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/171181/images/4956_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Lo graduated in Forest and Natural Resource Management at the National Taiwan University, and obtained a PhD in Forest Ecology from the University of British Columbia (Canada). She is currently working as Research Associate at the Public University of Navarra (Spain). During her research, Dr. Lo has studied the influence of climate on tree growth and productivity, and developed and tested models to simulate the effects of climate change on tree productivity, combining the use of tree-ring records with field data on biogeochemical factors and tree distribution. At present, she is involved in several research lines studying the long-term influence of environmental factors on tree growth and forest development. She is also interested in the practical applications of forest ecology in restoration of altered forest plantations, and has co-edited books of forests and biodiversity published by InTech.",institutionString:null,position:null,outsideEditionCount:null,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"2",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"0",institution:{name:"Universidad Publica De Navarra",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Spain"}}},coeditorTwo:{id:"171157",title:"Prof.",name:"Shovonlal",middleName:null,surname:"Roy",slug:"shovonlal-roy",fullName:"Shovonlal Roy",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/171157/images/5465_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Shovonlal Roy completed a Masters in Applied Mathematics, and obtained a PhD in Mathematical Biology with particular emphasis in marine ecosystems. \nCurrently, Dr. Roy is a Lecturer at the University of Reading, UK. As an ecological modeller, his research aims at better understanding of the mechanisms of stability and diversity in ecosystems by combining empirical data and mechanistic models. His works include application of dynamical systems theory, dynamics and biodiversity of marine plankton, satellite remote sensing of ocean colour, and data\nassimilation.",institutionString:null,position:null,outsideEditionCount:null,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"1",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"0",institution:{name:"University of Reading",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United Kingdom"}}},coeditorThree:null,coeditorFour:null,coeditorFive:null,topics:[{id:"355",title:"Biodiversity",slug:"agricultural-and-biological-sciences-plant-biology-biodiversity"}],chapters:[{id:"47509",title:"Importance of Allelopathy as Peudo-Mixotrophy for the Dynamics and Diversity of Phytoplankton",slug:"importance-of-allelopathy-as-peudo-mixotrophy-for-the-dynamics-and-diversity-of-phytoplankton",totalDownloads:2086,totalCrossrefCites:0,authors:[{id:"171157",title:"Prof.",name:"Shovonlal",surname:"Roy",slug:"shovonlal-roy",fullName:"Shovonlal Roy"}]},{id:"47598",title:"Functional Redundancy and Ecosystem Function — The Soil Microbiota as a Case Study",slug:"functional-redundancy-and-ecosystem-function-the-soil-microbiota-as-a-case-study",totalDownloads:2930,totalCrossrefCites:15,authors:[{id:"171037",title:"Dr.",name:"Joana",surname:"Falcão Salles",slug:"joana-falcao-salles",fullName:"Joana Falcão Salles"},{id:"171303",title:"Ms.",name:"Stephanie",surname:"Jurburg",slug:"stephanie-jurburg",fullName:"Stephanie Jurburg"}]},{id:"47668",title:"Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning in Tropical Habitats — Case Studies and Future Perspectives in Atlantic Rainforest and Cerrado Landscapes",slug:"biodiversity-and-ecosystem-functioning-in-tropical-habitats-case-studies-and-future-perspectives-in-",totalDownloads:2104,totalCrossrefCites:1,authors:[{id:"50115",title:"Prof.",name:"Jose",surname:"Schoereder",slug:"jose-schoereder",fullName:"Jose Schoereder"}]},{id:"47656",title:"Climate Change, Range Shifts and Multitrophic 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Although the Authorised Heritage Discourse (AHD) perspective have dominated the heritage worldview for most of the twentieth century. However, the Post millennium, Sustainable Development Goals(SDGs) era has brought to question more pointily prevalent heritage tenets. The concern of relegating Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) against Tangible Heritage (TH), the stance on indigenous architectural heritage and the critical place of socio-cultural value preferences of stakeholders and the diversity of perspectives in determining heritage value and its significance are prevalent. Furthermore, the latest discourse perspective has once more provided critical stakeholders’ opportunities to contribute to the debate and propound convincing arguments for possible adaptation and mainstream integration. The chapter, therefore, calls for new questions, new responses that are holistic, integrative and sustainable for all peoples and cultures of the world in the post-modernist millennium for SDGs attainment in current and future heritage management base on a paradigm shift.
The paradigm of intangible tangibility and the tangibility of intangibles are quite contradictory and seeming divisive, however, the chapter argues that all the tangibles heritages are living and have their existence at the instance of the intangible’s cultural heritage dynamisms. Therefore, all tangibles (physical) domains are first and foremost intangible (spiritual) beings; without which nothing seems to exist at the perceptual domain and the said realm of reality. The tangibility of intangible heritage features also confirms Vecco [1] argument that heritage discourse has merged into one, the past testimonies and its goods; which is being driven by the intangible resource base [2]. If Alternative Heritage Discourse (ALHD) would remain relevant and all-encompassing, then it should therefore be true in spirit and the letter of its profession. It must be professionally guided, but socio-culturally anchored on indigenous immaterial and material societies developmental processes. The study propounded integrative heritage view is akin to the architectural ‘form follows function’ paradigm of Luis Sullivan in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It means space is created base on its functional requirement or necessity space or material heritage is an extension of the immaterial socio-cultural processes of any people. Frank Lloyd Wright argues however that form and function are the same further also reinforces the intangible tangible and tangible intangibility as the same. Essentially affirming that each one of the two heritage categories and domains flows into one another thereby giving birth to some of the great architectural masterpieces in the modern era of architecture. However, translating the established argument of the nineteenth century had been quite impossible due to the highly machinated arguments of the architectural modernist movement lead by Walter Gropius, Le Corbusier and Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe amongst others [3, 4, 5]. Thus the question of an integrative nature of things and thought is now even more pertinent in the post-millennium evolving heritage perspective arguments.
A chronological evolution of heritage discourse perspectives over time and their critical milestone principles and positions as well as how they foreshadow current accepted reality will be carefully analysed. Therefrom congruence viewpoints and their point of divergence will serve as a guide in critically creating a true picture for Alternative Heritage Discourse (ALHD) for all times as the chapter’s contribution. Heritage here is considered as a living socio-cultural process over time, it could be from the past, an expression of the present and could be a projected futuristic realm. Simply, heritage is considered a process that transcends time in nature (form) and operation. Heritage is beyond the past, rather encompasses the present that could be operative in the future-for all generation. At this point, the study addresses heritage definition, concepts and various discourse perspectives, while contextualising them for the study purpose. To understand the architectural heritage worldview, the study firstly highlights the broad concept of heritage definition and evolutional process from inception to contemporary worldview. An analysis of the concept of cultural heritage and its evolution in Western Europe stated that the coinage of the term heritage was from French Patrimoine-parent heritage that is for personal heritage which went through an epoch of evolvement to its present usage [1]. Similarly, the word monuments were originally considered as an expression of worthy historical testimonies being preserved [6]. With the French revolution, the royal properties were appropriated as that of the public based on the secularisation principle. Indigenous Architecture here has to do with the architecture that is native to a people and evolves from the socio-cultural processes and sustenance needs including the desire for the activity’s habitation. Indigenous is both in terms of design concept, materials and construction techniques and distinguishes it from vernacular and traditional architecture. It is the indigeneity sustenance of heritage that requires reassessment within the global context of heritage discourse.
Study’s chapter review is justified considering the prevalence of the AHD perspective which is mainly Eurocentric information and operation. Further, the exclusion of very potent indigenous heritage features across Sub-Saharan Africa on the guise of their not being of universal significance required a critical revisit. If the future and identity of the Africans and their heritage resource base would be sustained over the next century, the concept of ALHD must be appropriately integrated into the subsequent process of heritage discourse, conventions and charters. The evolutionary trend of heritage at various point in history demonstrated that just before the Second World War, the heritage concept became internationally institutionalised and did imbibe the cultural dimension with the 1931 Athens conference. The conversation translates from the objective to the subjective, which is from historic monument to logic of the heritage, and that is where the tangible and intangible heritage debates emanated. Heritage-monument discourse was however gradually merged into one by adoption without a clear statement on why and in what way the parental inherited goods and the testimonies of the past became one, but for the event(s) of history [1]. The events of history that have defined our heritage discourse for almost a century seems to have arrived at a threshold and requires a thorough reassessment to propound sound holistic heritage discourse paradigm shift. It is the examination and contextualization of the heritage discourse perspective that could halt the prevalent trend of material heritage against the immaterial heritage perspectives. This review chapter believed that the immaterial (spiritual) and the material (physical) are the same, first as a process and then secondly as a product.
The study scope is within three charter of 1964, 1972 and 2003 in the perspective of indigenous architecture of Sub-Saharan African communities. It is worthy to state that critical charters and conventions undertaken by relevant heritage organisation within the stated period do not necessarily exhaust all pieces of literature on the subject matter. Several efforts have been made on the concern of Africans on heritage discourse perspective in the global sphere. These concerns have indeed resulted in several efforts as the considerations had earlier been underscored based on 1989 (Recommendation on the Safeguarding of Traditional Culture and Folklore). Similarly, the 2001 and 2002 United Nation Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity and the Istanbul Declaration respectively. In the chapter contribution context, therefore, intangible heritage serves as the heart of heritage discourse and perspectives development. Subsequently, the intangible evolves into a product in form of tangible heritage within historical or cultural settings. The duo of intangible and tangible heritages is driven by the stakeholders’ significance value preferences, thereby giving birth to a global view that is considered holistic and integrative of all processes and products from generation to generation.
Because of the transcending nature of the heritage process, the indigenous African heritage had suffered untold interruption since the colonialization adventure. In most instances, the religious and spiritual attachment of the people to their land, cultural festivities, ritual process and ancestral responsibilities are severed. The severance of the people from their socio-cultural living process has made it quite difficult for their heritage to be sustainable regardless of their designation as tangible or intangible. The Abrahamic faiths have virtually erased the African beliefs systems and thus their life processes which determine their heritage. The process of breaking the indigenous African from their cultural festivities and ceremonies through rituals started with destroying and looting their artefacts, exporting archaeological findings and indoctrinating them with a new belief system that is not compactable with their worldview. Such viewpoint still dominates the African continent and determines their perspective; however, the tide is rising in contradiction of the prevalent directing of thought. The coming tide cannot be swept away under any guise, considering the barefaced reality of past detours and the urgent cry for the truly known reality of the Africans-their customs and traditional lifestyle. On the other hand, the universal heritage concept evolved from the charters, conventions and resolution of UNESCO; which does not necessarily demonstrate the unity of the spirit and the letter as initially advocated.
A broader view of heritage concept showed that over the years’ scholars have demonstrated that the heritage concept and discourse can be visualised in two dimensions (visible and the invisible; material and immaterial or tangible and intangible) components and that each is complementary to the other rather than isolated. It is, however, worthy to note that definition and identity clashes of heritage discourse across the varied socio-cultural divide have many strains [1, 7]. The varied strains are often visible across all regions of the world [8, 9]. Accumulated research demonstrated that the visible(tangible) cultural heritage as in Table 1 is often presented as the generally accepted perspective of most discourse [13]. From such viewpoint tangible heritage is repeatedly considered as the main type of heritage that tourist admires, locals hold unto and managers pride themselves about, which is referred to as the Authorised Heritage Discourse (AHD) perspective. Though, AHD perception seems to be mostly Eurocentric and mainly conversed in the past; recently, the invisible(intangible) heritage as in Table 2 are no longer glossed over. In fact, since the 2003 convention intangible(immaterial) heritage now serves as the real driving force of the material heritage [2]. It is this new perspective of the tangible and intangible heritage that provokes this study and specifically its relevance in strategic placement of architectural heritage features as they are valued amongst indigenous African communities of Sub-Saharan Africa [10, 16]. This tangible and intangible definition and discourse conflicts is illustrated in Tables 1 and 2 and will here further analyse and synthesised for ease of understanding and subsequent applicability in the empirical conceptual studies. The specific attributes of tangible and intangible heritage attributes of tangible and intangible heritage further aggregated in the next section based on the relevant charters.
S/nos | Heritage categorisation | Sub-categorisation | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Cultural | Monuments: Architectural, sculpture & paintings, archaeological structures, inscriptions, cave dwellings and combinations of features. | Traditionally these were the first set of buildings that invoke the concept of architectural heritage and the need for their conservation. |
Group of Buildings: Separate or connected buildings with homogenous of place on landscape. | Group of buildings form an integral part of cultural landscape heritage features and quite relevant for this particular study. | ||
Sites (works of man or combined with nature, areas including archaeological sites which are of Outstanding Universal Value(OUV) from historical, aesthetics, ethnological and anthropological point of view). | This landscape features are similarly significant for the study of indigenous settlements across the study area. | ||
2 | Natural | Physical and biological formations or groups. | Most indigenous communities are an integral part of the natural and geological landscape. |
Geological and Physiographical Formations and Delineated Areas of Threatened Species. | |||
Natural sites or Precisely Delineated Natural Areas. | |||
3 | Mixed Cultural Landscape | Clearly defined landscape: Gardens and parkland landscapes constructed for aesthetic reasons of not always associated with religious or monumental buildings. | The mixed cultural landscape is an integration of the man-made and naturally endowed features of a site. This is where the study cultural landscape sites could be also categorised. |
Organically Evolved Landscape: Relics or fossil landscape, continuity landscape. | |||
Associated Cultural landscape: Virtue of powerful religious, artistic or cultural association with natural element rather than material cultural evidence. |
S/nos | Heritage categorisation | Sub-categorisation | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Main domains of Intangible Cultural Heritage(ICH) | Oral tradition and Expressions | This is where most of the Sub-Saharan African civilization is currently quite visible and continually in practice as a living culture. Though there has been some transformation over the years, these heritage domain features are the essence of the visible heritage buildings and monument across most of the indigenous African communities. Intangible architectural heritage fora or physical environment in order of the presented domain could be stated as; (a)Courtyards, Fireplace & Village square; (b)Village Square; (c) Village Square, Shrine, Sacred Grove/Forest; (d)Courtyard, Farmland, Craft centre and (e) Blacksmith hut, Crafts shed & Terra cotta centre. |
2 | Performance Arts | ||
3 | Social Practices, Rituals and Festive events | ||
4 | Knowledge and Practice Concerning Nature and the Universe | ||
5 | Traditional Craftsmanship |
The review discourse is both thematic and typological in categorisation, where intangible and tangible heritage perspectives are considered as a process that could evolve into a product. Discourse perspectives of the tangible heritage categorisation and its subcategorization, stating implication concerning the study perspective is as indicated in Table 1.
The illustration shown on Table 2 indicates the main domains of intangible heritage features including their sub-categorisation and the remarks demonstrates how each intangible heritage has a tangible equivalent space.
Heritage concept as tangible and intangible having Alternative Heritage Discourse (ALHD) as prevailing perspective is critically analysed here. In their study, Smith and Campbell [17] argued that the term intangible heritage is a misrepresentation and contradiction of the concept of heritage based on the Authorised Heritage Discourse perspective. Their perspective of considering intangible heritage as being merely a tautology is nevertheless, both contentious and agreeable. It is first considered as agreeable because it has been argued that all heritage is intangible [2]. However, the averred perception of all heritage as intangible also believes that heritage is a process but unfortunately a process that is mainly a preoccupation of the experts or professionals. The contention here is that intangible heritage is here considered more community centred in outlook and process and enabled by professional guidance and not serving as its determinant. Intangible cultural heritage bearers are considered as a critical part of the process of heritage discourse and categorisation as well as the listing requirements. The critical role of the local community and their socio-cultural significance in intangible heritage discourse distinguishes it from the tangible heritage; which can be argued as mainly a product of the Eurocentric world view anchored by the experts [2, 13, 18]. The consideration of intangible heritage as contentious in heritage discourse is anchored on the fact that it is the pressure from mainly excluded heritage realities of the southern hemisphere (Asia and Africa) that gave birth to the recognition of alternative heritage discourse. The intangible heritage discourse perspective has greatly questioned the 1964 Venice Charter for conservation and restoration of monuments and sites, which concretised the Authorised Heritage Discourse perspective for most of the twentieth century. In 2003 based on several contentious discourses and misrepresentation that cause misunderstanding, the convention for the Safeguarding of the intangible cultural heritage was born [14]. Towards furthering the diversity of views by various researchers Smith [2] argued that an increasing number of heritage studies is currently ongoing on multi-disciplinary research and practices. Smith also claimed that heritage is a process of acculturalization; which often involves diverse aspects of its study.
The International Council for Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) Venice charter of 1964 was a product of the 2nd International Congress of Architects and Technician of Historic Monuments (ICATHM) held on 25th to 31st May 1964, further derived from the Athens Conference of 1931 and Italian Restoration Convention of 1932. During the congress, it was agreed that monuments and sites protection should be towards achieving social usefulness within the heritage historical setting and maintaining its original scale. However, since the Venice conference declaration, not much has been heard of the instrumentality of social value as the commanding light for global architectural heritage conservation. It became particularly Eurocentric and materially oriented with the promulgation of the 1964 Venice charter. The International Charter of Venice of 1964 first article did considered heritage as;
Unfortunately, cultural significance with time in most indigenous Africa cultural setting might mean nothing but an expression. After all, the concept of OUV that is supposed to guarantee authenticity, material integrity, universal significance and management practices is nebulous and ineffective in the application within indigenous cultural landscapes.
Athens Charter of 1931 laid the earliest principles that later give birth to the 1964 Venice charter that has sixteen articles commencing with the assertion that it was;
Considering that a message from the past in form of historic monuments abound in virtually all cultures and communities through time; there is therefore the concern of which message is more dominant and how does preserving it preserves other people’s historical past. What is being argued here is that each people have a message for their future generation and based on their cultural values. It, therefore, becomes quite difficult to segregate some features as the sole witness of the traditional past and as a unique representative of human civilization. Similarly, though there is an observed unity of human value, they cannot be said to be the same or the listed heritage as the only representation of the common heritage for all cultures. For a fully rich authenticity assessment of heritage features, all parameter of the various heritage culture and tradition should form the core framework (tangible and intangible).
The second paragraph of the charter argued that “… with each country being responsible for applying the plan within the framework of its own culture and traditions.”([11], p. 1). The concern however is that how could each country apply the plan base on the framework of its culture and tradition when in the first instance their unique culture and tradition were not fundamentally the basis of the charter. This concern ultimately was realised when the intangible heritage argument was adopted. Unfortunately, the ICH was also treated as just an alternative heritage rather than considering them as an integral part of the process of heritage development.
As preliminary procedures for the convention held in Paris from 17th October to 21st November 1972 the 17 sessions of the UNESCO congress noted that; heritage features are continually being threatened and often destroyed as a result of traditional causes and socio-economic dynamics, thereby aggravating the concerns of these occurrences [12, 19]. Further consideration was made concerning the deterioration and its effect on the cultural and natural global heritage. Similarly, the consideration and concern for lack of adequate resources and technical know-how amongst nation towards protecting these heritages led to the adoption and promulgation of the convention. The charter is made up of eight sections and 38 articles According to article 1 of the charter it categorised Cultural heritage as being;
While article 2 of the charter considered natural heritage as;
These natural heritage features in most instances are an integral part of the cultural landscape of indigenous communities’ heritage. Therefore, even when such heritage categorisation is established, they do not necessarily affirm a definite demarcation. This is where the indigenous heritage features of most Sub-Saharan African categorisation become burdensome. In Africa, there is little distinction between the natural and cultural heritage and the tangible is seen as an evolvement of the intangible.
Furthermore, there are several other charters, conventions and recommendation during heritage discourse that need to be highlighted because of their relevance to the study as illustrated in Table 3. The table gives an idea of the evolution of the various heritage discourse perspectives towards giving birth to the main charters of the study.
S/nos | Heritage charter/convention/recommendations | Year | Unique features | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Athens Charter | 1931 | Some international doctrines based on adopted principles were used in drafting an international practice code. This code is for the protection of monuments and sites; which can be achieved through conservation, restoration and contextual consolidation of the monument site. | Laid the foundation for the Authorised Heritage Discourse that was centred on tangible cultural heritage. |
2 | Italian Restoration | 1932 | An official “Scientific Restoration” standard was supported as a form of methodology for protective intervention on ancient monuments and sites. | As home to some of the best known classical architectural master pieces, the restoration template ultimately laid the basis for subsequent conservation activities in other heritage structures that were considered as worthy of being universally recognised. |
3 | Venice Charter | 1964 | The charter codified standards for conservation and restoration practices as it regards historic monuments and sites. | Is the framework for tangible cultural heritage identification, conservation and listing |
4 | Amsterdam Declaration | 1975 | It provided support for the integrated conservation undertakings with respect to single monuments, urban and regional planning and its processes. Here the integrated conservation was adopted that incorporated historical knowledge, conservation, socio-cultural benefits and behaviour. | The first major concern on an integrated format for heritage conservation, which ultimately has effect on the 2003 convention on safeguarding intangible heritage as being a critical aspect of true conservation intent. |
5 | Nara Document on Authenticity | 1994 | Societies are a manifestation of their heritage that is engrained in art, music and literature as their civilization often in form of tangible or intangibles value expressions that deserved noteworthy esteeming. | The significant place of society in the management of heritages was brought to bear, thereby reiterating the place for an integrated concept of conservation, that can be enduring. |
6 | The Burra Charter | 1999 | Defined subjects in relation to cultural heritage significance providing guidelines for management as well as conserving diverse sites of cultural significance. The cultural value of significant places is natural, indigenous and historic. | This Burra charter brought out the significance significant value of indigenous heritage places, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa where the place |
7 | Charter of Cracow | 2000 | Specific conservation interventions on architecture, urban and landscape heritage as well as artefacts are categorised as environmental control, maintenance, repair, restoration, renovation and rehabilitation. | This allow for the indigenous landscape heritage to be conserved based on various perspectives; ie; using environmental control, repairs and restoration. |
8 | ICOMOS-ISCARSAH Charter | 2003 | Cultural heritage conservation and restoration are treated as engineering and technical activity. Thus the place of scientifically based understudy of actual realities and effects on the monument or site as the principal basis for any action. | Due to the highly technical and scientific requirement for engineering conservation activities current conservation effort are better managed based on accurate data collected. |
Other selected charters, conventions and recommendations on heritage conservation and restoration.
Source: Adapted from Rouhi [20].
It could be argued that some of the perspectives on the place of indigenous heritage vice-a-vice the Eurocentric world view force the emergence of the 2003 convention on intangible cultural heritage. However, it could be further posited that the current position can only serve as the impetus to further the cause of integrating indigenous heritage perspective and create alternative heritage discourse which is what the chapter contribution is currently advocating. Base on the 2003 convention held on 29th September to 17 October 2003 at the 32nd session of the UNESCO general assembly in Paris France several referrals and consideration formed the basis of the final convention draft position [14]. Referrals were derived from 1948 (Universal Declaration on Human Rights), the 1966 International Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights as well as the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights). The considerations were based on the supposition that intangible heritage is considered as the mainspring of diversity in culture and a central supporter of sustainable development. These considerations had earlier been underscored based on 1989 (Recommendation on the Safeguarding of Traditional Culture and Folklore). Similarly, are the 2001 and 2002 UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity and the Istanbul Declaration respectively. According to article one of the conventions, its objectives include;
The stated objectives indicate that safeguarding the intangible cultural heritage, their respect, need for awareness which guarantees global assistance for the heritage indicates that the primary desire of the convention is to assuage growing calls for indigenous cultural resource acknowledgement, documentation and indeed their appropriate conservation and listing.
According to the convention’s Article 2, intangible cultural heritage is;
In providing a sense of identity and continuity of their heritage character, what the definition of intangible heritage is arguing, is its physical essence to a people’s existence and subsequently bequeathed. On that basis, therefore, this thesis is equally arguing that intangible cultural heritage is in a way an integral part of the physical or visible heritage(s). There is to say, there cannot be a material heritage without its immaterial flip side. Though an immaterial heritage might not have a truly tangible component. Thus, the process-product argument of heritage is here affirmed as an integrated unit.
Further, the convention categorised Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) into five domains that include;
Intangible Cultural Heritages (ICH) are categorised as stated above, but what comes to mind then is whether all these ICH features are spiritual, invisible and therefore immeasurable in the same sense as the tangible? While the two heritage categories measuring scale might be contested as different; this chapter review maintains that they are an integral part of the processes of evolving heritage features, whether tangible or intangible. In other words, intangible heritage does birth tangible heritages as either movable, immovable, physical and therefore tangible. They are twins and need to be valued as an integrated whole, which could be a sure medium of protecting and safeguarding both heritages through integrated conservation strategies. This argument is best demonstrated in the cultural landscapes of indigenous communities of Sub-Saharan Africa and remain the principal basis of their conservation if they are to be protected and safeguarded for current and future generation.
The various charters have been evolving since the 1964 Venice charter, it considers the historic monuments to the contemporary tradition; where the human value is consciously acknowledged as collective heritage that requires a concerted effort in safeguarding them for the future. The safeguarding and conservation strategy can only be achievable if the value essence of heritage is assessed properly. Subsequently, the 1972 charter for the protection of cultural and natural heritage came up; where the concern was on heritage features continual threats and destruction that was due to traditional dynamics and socio-economic causes. The charter of 2003 on safeguarding intangible cultural heritage five domains is an attempt to sort the growing southern hemispheric concern on the virtual exclusion of their heritage reality based on AHD. What the three charters and conventions have shown, however, is the changing dynamics of the heritage discourse and this chapter intends to extend it further to an integrated format, where intangible and tangible heritage features are identified, documented and conserved for listing as a holistic process-product endeavour. The charters and conventions discussed, have essentially aid in establishing the study focus from its historical past to contemporary socio-cultural realities amongst indigenous communities. It argued on the integrative nature of all heritage and the need to formally acknowledge such categorisation as well as their conservation for transgenerational benefits. The call for constant reassessment and review of global perspectives on heritage discourse for future revaluation and redefinition of heritage in accordance to ALHD perspective.
To understand the basis of heritage being considered and listed, the study further expounds on the various criteria necessary to list a building, monument or site in this section. Similarly, a clear understanding of the architectural heritage features as being different from the monument, ensembles and sites is undertaken. Here heritage features are considered as physical or immaterial attributes identifiable with a society, monument is however mostly multidimensional structure with art historical, political, technical or architectural relevance to a people [11, 12]. The key ingredient for heritage listing based on the concept of Outstanding Universal Value (OUV) is anchored on authenticity, integrity and universal value significance [19]. By authenticity, it is meant as the quality of being genuine to be acceptable or even believed. There must be no pretensions, but serving as original based on some honest essential features [21].
Based on the concept of authenticity, the credibility of truthful information is significant in value attributes. It is worthy to state here that the value attribute does vary from one culture to another and even within a culture. Therefore, the use of OUV in determining monumental heritage could be questioned even more emphatically. In examining heritage value within the cultural context the attributes for consideration are; “materials and substance; use and function; traditions, techniques and management systems; location and setting; language, and other forms of intangible heritage; spirit and feeling; and other internal and external factors” ([19], pp. 53–54). Correspondingly in establishing heritage integrity, the main concern is concerning the material integrity of the heritage feature specifically. To assess the extent of heritage integrity the OUV elements, their size and any effect of advertising development or neglect are established for a heritage. It is usually framed up as a statement of integrity that shows physical fabric condition, that could be the impact of controlled deterioration and the dynamism of the heritage function within the cultural landscape. Ultimately, the very critical factor for listing heritage is its value significance whether it is based on historical, art, science, aesthetic, ethnological or anthropological viewpoint ([19], p. 10).
The actual component units of heritage as monuments, ensembles and sites had been established in the definitions of cultural heritage as discussed in the 1972 charter and detailed earlier [19]. Heritage management strategy is, therefore, a critical part of the criteria required for its listing. There is also the concern for heritage future maintenance of its outstanding value after it has been inscribed. The need for long term legislation, the role of regulatory agencies, institutional and traditional protection as well as heritage effective boundaries is paramount. There is the need for the allowance of a buffer zone to shield the actual property being protected is quite significant. For an effective management system of protected properties, the stakeholders should have a common understanding, maintain planning, implementation, monitoring, evaluation and feedback succession. Equally, the stakeholders should always be involved in any strategy or action, allotment of basic assets, capacity building and functionally accountability.
As argued by ICOMOS [22] heritage listing were initially evolved around three (3) major frameworks of Typological, Chronological-Regional and Thematic frameworks. The World Heritage Committee(WHC) being strengthened by Global Strategy later esteemed the thematic style to heritage listing, this has since remained the accepted framework in use. The typological framework considered the various types of cultural heritage, while the chronological-regional framework has the world heritage viewed in term of time and space. It is worthy to state here that the thematic framework in listing heritage based on Outstanding Universal value (OUV) criteria did also utilised the typology of creative responses and continuity as indicated in Table 4. It is significant to state here that it was from the thematic framework as shown in the table that current heritage perception evolved to ultimately incorporate the concept of tangible and intangible heritage perspective being currently conversed, as the emphasis of the chapter’s contribution. It, therefore, calls for a reassessment of the heritage discourse perspective that is holistic in terms of thematic, chronological-regional and typological nature. ICCROM 1976 report written by its director, similarly argued that the different heritage values that should be considered are the artistic, historic and typological values [22]. The artistic value here was concern with original and unique creation with exceptional universally acknowledged quality according to the experts. The historic value is a concern with the verification of the feature in terms of uniqueness/rarity, novelty, inspiration exercise in time and space by the heritage as well as status for the comprehension of development comparative to historic events. The typological value
S/nos | Criteria | Features | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
1 | A masterpiece of human creative genius. | A piece of the history of humankind. | Aesthetic/artistic value plays a role in exchange of artistic trends. |
2 | An important interchange of human values over time within cultural area on architectural and related developments. | Happens over a span of time or within a cultural area, thus is within a historical framework and periods. | Exchange of artistic trend with respect to monumental arts, town-planning or landscape design. |
3 | A testimony to a unique cultural tradition or a civilization which is living or which has disappeared. | Concerns cultural history or civilization. | Applicable to virtually all heritage features and sites. |
4 | Significant stages in human history with outstanding types of building, architectural, technological. Ensemble or landscape. | The outstanding examples of the different types and categories of monuments, ensembles and sites are meant to stand for. | Concern certain historical types of buildings and ensembles have aesthetic dimensions. |
5 | An example of a traditional human settlement, land-use or sea-use etc | Represents a piece of human history. | Similar to criteria (iv) above and true for settlements. |
6 | Part of the history of a place Be directly or tangibly associated with events or living traditions, with ideas, or with beliefs, with artistic and literary works of outstanding universal significance | The association with events is mainly referring to historical events or domicile traditions. | Associated with artistic works and depictions. |
7 | The major stages of earth’s history Contain superlative natural phenomena or areas of exceptional natural beauty and aesthetic importance. | History also plays a role with regard to natural heritage, in the case of this criterion. | Areas of exceptional beauty and aesthetic importance on natural phenomena. |
8 | The biological processes in the evolution and development of ecosystems. | Are a part of the history of the earth. | Often remote and unique natural features that unveils the history of our planet. |
9 | An outstanding example of eco-biological and continuing evolutionary processes. | Involves terrestrial, fresh water plants and animals as well as marine life. | These are continuing significant evolutionary processes of all things on earth. |
10 | Encompass substantially critical natural habitat of biological species. | That should be in-situ as well as being threatened | Most features have scientific and conservation universal relevance. |
Framework of criteria for cultural heritages listing based on OUV.
Note: In most instances scientific value and ethnological or anthropological values could be combined with different criteria as they are being assessed. These OUV are variously presented in the different countries’ protection laws as a reflection of their cultural heritage features that are mostly identified as monuments. However, they are usually an expression of the classical historical values, aesthetic/artistic values in their wide-ranging form. Authenticity and integrity are core requirement that are reinforced by the OUV in heritage listing.
Heritage typological classification, therefore, encourages a variety of heritage features across the different cultural settings which essentially could ensure that threatened heritages or those at risk of disappearing are appropriately identified, documented and conserved for transgenerational benefits. In short there should be develop an integrated framework for heritage identity and listing process that is all encompassing and holistic inconsideration of all cultures and peoples.
In the course of listing various heritage features, UNESCO with the technical support of the World Heritage Committee utilised some criteria to arrive at the selected features and based on its recommendation the features are treated as being of significance to be protected for the benefit of the global community. Figure 1 graphically illustrated the various criteria that were used in listing the different heritage features from 1978 to 2007. The Orange colour indicated criteria six (6), Light Blue colour stood for criteria five (5), Purple for criteria four (4), Green was for criteria three (3), while the red colour stands for criteria two (2) and Deep blue stood for criteria one (1). A further look at the graph showed that the most commonly used criteria were six, while the least used was criteria one. However, as a general guide, there are ten (10) criteria that are used, which were derived from the ICOMOS operational guidelines ([22], pp. 13–14). For a heritage feature to be listed, the selected and documented feature is expected to meet any one or more of the value criteria in addition to integrity and authenticity. Since these value criteria deal with significant value in terms of OUV, detail and contextualised further discussion shall be undertaken on the actual placement of value in examining the architectural heritage on other related studies.
The different criteria used annually for cultural heritage listing. Source: ICOMOS ([
However, it has also been opined that though geo-cultural balancing of heritage list may not necessarily lead to an immediate and automatic paradigm shift; it will nevertheless ensure heterogeneity of the list and broader value-based perception for all heritage regardless of the current stereotyped concept of their monumentality [10]. It is the argument that has further inflame the study’s passion towards a broad base architectural heritage categorisation that could serve as an Alternative Heritage Discourse (ALHD) that is sensitive to indigenous cultural resources.
To understand the placement of the thesis argument it will be important to also understand the criteria used in the assessment of intangible heritage features. The basis for the safeguarding of these ICH features is as stated in the convention which is either as representative list or those in need of urgent safeguarding. The selection committee meets and proposed criteria for their listing on receipt of a nomination from member countries and forwards selected ones to the general assembly of UNESCO for ratification [15]. There does not seem to be specific criteria enumerated for the listing of the ICH, indicating that there seems not to be definitive particulars that can be universally applied. It seems the ICH option was just brought up to satisfy agitations rather than setting them on the same pedestal with the tangible heritage features. However, according to the Convention on Safeguarding ICH, article 13(c), which has to do with other measures of safeguarding; it argued on the need to; “
The convention document, however, gave room for further research and could effectively aid in safeguarding the ICH. The thesis argues that the surest safeguard is to identify heritages (tangible and intangible) as the same and undertake relevant studies that would substantiate its integrative nature. Since the enactment of the Convention for Safeguarding ICH, about 508 elements within 122 countries have been listed as intangible cultural heritage as of 2018 [24]. Accordingly, Nigeria had only four elements listed as part of the ICH, amongst which are Argungu International Fishing and Cultural Festival in 2016, Ijele Masquerade in 2009 and Ifa divination System in 2008, the Oral heritage of Gelede in 2008 (also found in Benin and the Togo Republic) were listed as a representative list of the intangible cultural heritage of humanity. It shows that none is listed due to the need to safeguard them, could then be argued that no ICH in Nigeria is threatened or in danger of being lost that is worthy of being listed. This position will need to be re-evaluated for substantiation or otherwise which, is what this study sort to highlight.
Stakeholders are those affected and can be influenced by a group’s conduct, thereby bearing varied possibilities as a consequence [25, 26]. The varied social perspective of heritage does require adequate understanding considering its diversity; while other concerns of preserving its physical features and ensuring alternative responsive tourism development also need urgent deliberation [27]. Hadjri and Boussaa further argued that the opinion of experts as stakeholders, actors (tenant or owners) of the structures, as well as those who use it either as foreign or local visitors including heritage development partners is critical in determining the suitable heritage management strategy. While the physical and spatial features of heritage are critical, its most significant variable is the social factor that is often a concern with the local stakeholders. Avrami, Mason & Torre [28] stated that the main stakeholders for heritage valuation should include, art historians, conservators, anthropologist, natural scientist as part of broad multidisciplinary team members. Similarly, Mason [29] listed stakeholders to include professionals like architects, planners, curators, tourist and investors. Analysis on tourism and cultural development considers tourist and the community bearers as the key stakeholders [30]. Rojas [31] stated that heritage stakeholders can be considered as social actors and he categorised them into promoters, beneficiaries and financiers. In that instance, he considers the promoters as cultural elites, beneficiaries as local community members and tour operators. Similarly, Rojas considered government and private philanthropists as being financiers. However, in this study, the philanthropist and financiers are considered heritage development partners. Broadly, heritage tourism stakeholders are said to incorporate the host community, facilitators, facility users, design experts and the regulatory agencies as was variously adduced in Oluigbo [32]. Conversely, Smith [2] posited that heritage can be expressed as a form of museum activity involving activity processes and focused on technical experts that can be categorised as institution and government, then communities as well as individuals. The communities according to Smith are made up of the site holders, professionals, researchers, museum and heritage staff. In his argument, Szmelter [33] argued that strategic heritage valuation decisions are dependent on various stakeholders amongst which are conservators, curators, scholars of different background in culture and science. Similarly, he reasoned that for conservation to be worthwhile, it must be broadly based and emanates from the due social dialogue.
The critical stakeholders in the case of this chapter contribution are categorised as the local community members (Heritage Bearers), the Experts and the Development Partners. Therefore, apt heritage valuation should serve as an impetus for appropriate and sustainable conservation as perceived by critical stakeholders. Imalwa [34] reaffirmed the stated contention by arguing that the prerequisite for resounding heritage conservation and management is the stakeholders with interest and ownership of the site(s). Sroczynska [35] categorised heritage stakeholders as those that monuments should be protected for as owners/users, tourist, residents within heritage area and those with no social usage. Sroczynska’s study considers 95.49% of Polish respondents as a tourist, being the most important user of monuments for economic reason, the second significant group of users were acknowledged as the local community bearers at 61.19%. This finding reinforced the significant place of community bearers in heritage management even in highly commercialised (tourist biased) heritage perceptual environment.
Towards having a broad spectrum of stakeholders to benefit from the heritage broader perspective as against Smith [2] argument on AHD based on the views of experts; the study sort to involve all parties to the wider heritage discourse towards enhancing the prospect of arriving at a perspective of True Heritage Discourse (THD) as ALHD. The stakeholders’ perspective indicates how diverse the concept is, as it is viewed differently by the various groups and individuals. For the chapter contribution, however, the stakeholders are categorised into the Heritage Bearers (indigenous communities), the Experts and the Development Partners as shown in Figure 2. In the stakeholders’ categorisation, it indicated the critical place of the heritage bearers at the base of the pyramid and the supporting role of partners on these heritage features and site. The experts often also referred to as the professionals sit at the peak of the pyramidal jigsaw. Here the professionals’ evolution of the perceptual opinion of the pyramid base (Bearers), and the development partners that will provide the raw data and serve as the real custodian of the heritage for current and future generation. Therefore, stakeholders in this study will serve as the major repository of research information considering their interest and possible benefits from the identification, documentation and conservation for tourism valorisation and development of the heritage features within each study area. The variance of the public opinion with that of the professional has often been observed in virtually all fields of endeavour, however effective management of stakeholders in any project can give excellent result as was demonstrated by Charles Birnbaun article on managing change and modern landscape indicated how public opinion prevail over that of the experts’ proposition in heritage development options [36].
Stakeholders categorisation for integrated alternative heritage discourse (ALHD). Source: Adapted from [
Equally, Charlottesville Mall in Virginia was designed by Halprin with inclusive community participation in the 1970s, however, due to years of neglect the city council mould remodelling the mall to remove the signature bricks. The proposal was strongly opposed due to public outcry and they ultimately got what they wanted [36]. It is therefore pertinent to have a more holistic strategy where the views of all stakeholders are sort at the inception of projects that ensures community participation in the project planning and its implementation. For this chapter review, therefore, to be contextualised the varied stakeholders’ preferences are placed appropriately to ensure the sustainability of the resource base and the continual beneficiation for all key stakeholders within any specific cultural landscape.
Sub-Saharan African is replete with assortment of architectural heritage sites, features and the driving forces of their socio-cultural essence. Whether they are categorised as tangible or intangible, cultural, natural or mixed and in some instances rural or urban, their design, development and continuous evolution over time is anchored on the socio-cultural process. In Africa, particularly the Sub-Saharan areas, the architectural heritage within their indigenous settlement has been and continuous to remain the community social process. It has also been affirmed that for their sustenance, their social process, must of necessity be maintained through the process of sanctuarisation, sacralisation, consecration and development of conventions in each community [37, 38]. The lone contemporary conservation process of preservation, restoration, repairs, maintenance and treatment, adaptation and reconstruction cannot protect the indigenous African heritage across generations [39, 40, 41]. The ineffectiveness is due to the fact that African indigenous heritage is not a mechanical process; it is first a communal, emotional and spiritual essence then a technical procedure with involvement of the indigenous bearers. It is worthy to note that once the inert and lethargic socio-cultural force of the heritage is lost, its dynamic vigour for existence cannot be sustain amongst African societies. Subsequently such heritage features are gradually left or abandoned to deteriorate, decay, become destroyed and often lost to future generation. The integrated nature of indigenous architectural heritage sites and features are as further graphically illustrated in Table 5 for better aesthetic appreciation.
Selected world heritage sites of cultural landscapes in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Source: Adapted from [42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49].
It is worthy to note that most of the highlighted listed landscapes in Sub-Saharan Africa are typically integrated together covering, cultural, natural and mixed features and in some instances the intangible cultural rituals, festival and artforms keeps the site relevant in the past and in some instances even currently. This further reinforced the nature of heritage sites, their features and cultural festivities as an expression of the Alternative Heritage Discourse (ALHD) perspective being conversed in this chapter made up of tangible and intangible features typical of African heritage dimensions.
Current and future heritage discourse perspectives must be holistic, integrative and an all-encompassing framework to guarantee the sustainability of all peoples and nations’ socio-cultural value significance of their bequeathed patrimonial allotments of indigenous architectural heritage. Most early studies of the indigenous architectural heritage of Africa seems to consider them as not worthy of serious research and or critical discourse and examination [50]. Prussin argued that the model of permanence base on Eurocentric architectural ideals should be a challenge. He rather argued that indigenous architectural placemarks are considered sacred through ancestral abode. Therefore, the indigenous settlements sacredness is critical in African socio-cultural value perceptual preferences and their significance of place and its architecture. The indigenous architectural heritage perspectives here cover the heritage, their conservation, alternative tourism prospects within the socio-cultural prism as the context for ALHD.
The prevailing loss of indigenous architectural heritage culture, knowledge and environment in Sub-Saharan Africa due to western imposed values is indeed a cause for concern [51]. Scott further argued that westernisation has striped most of SSA of their cultural pride particularly for architecture that had earlier been quite sustainable. The study by Scott, therefore, encouraged an African architecture that is considered aesthetically appealing, environmentally responsive, culturally mesmerising and adapts to the socio-economic realities of the people. Such a projected future for African architecture can however not be achievable if the existing heritage features are abandoned or left to decay. As such, the African heritage features will not be available for further research towards being adaptable for contemporary requirements. Ndoro, Mumma and Abungu [52] likewise, argued that heritage definition in SSA goes beyond the visible immovable features, as it incorporates different facets of culture, mode of communication, spiritual belief system, sacred groves, rivers and forest including their monuments. Indigenous heritage studies were said to have been reinforced after the 2002 Johannesburg World Summit and the commitment of governments to preserving their heritage.
Currently, heritage studies are established on the UN 2030 agenda on Sustainable Development Goals (SDG-11) that is anchored on “strengthen efforts to protect and safeguard the world’s cultural and natural heritage” ([53], p. 12). Similarly, this heritage goal is set to pursue in addition the challenges of poverty, social justice, climate change that guarantee the preservation of the ecosystem. Therefore, this study is premised on World Heritage Sustainable Development Policy (WH-SDP) as well as the African Union’s ‘Agenda 2063: The Africa We Want’, where local community participation and heritage resources are to be utilised for enhanced peace and prosperity in Africa ([54], p. 22). Mainstreaming of WH-SDP that is based on regional and national policies is considered pivotal to this study. Policy statements are to be such that the key stakeholders as bearers, experts and partners are considered as a critical part of the heritage management process the local community. World heritage discourse based on SDG’s was anchored on three dimensions of environment, economics and society under peaceful and secure context [53]. Moukala and Odiaua further argued that despite African heritage place in its development, the complex perceptual and relational features are not adequately tackled; particularly if viewed in the setting of centralised national resource management against diverse local community’s interest.
Myriad of challenges were further highlighted by the Index of Economic Freedom [55], which contended that Sub-Saharan Africa is ranked amongst the lowest in economic freedom leading to the erratic transformation of most sectors. Therefore, for Sub-Saharan Africa where current heritage listing criteria does not seem to have been adaptable enough; the intangible is being argued as the basis for the tangible [56]. In fact, for most African societies where the traditional practices are still prevalent, dead ancestors are an integral part of the living generation of believers in terms of their folklores and ritual practices indeed even their built settlement habitation [57]. Similar arguments are being advanced by several African scholars towards reasserting the Afrocentric viewpoint and voice in global heritage discourse [58, 59]. Africa heritage components, its list as approved by UNESCO and perspective of discussion is contentiously down the piking order despite being the cradle of human civilization. This reality despite abounding socio-cultural resources requires critical research for appropriate placement of the discourse and subsequent acknowledgement for more heritage listing in Sub-Saharan Africa and indeed Nigeria.
Conservation is significant and urgently required for Africa, particularly Sub-Saharan African. Catering for African heritage towards reasserting its relevance in global discourse is best presented in Pan African cultural manifesto where it was argued that;
The soul of the African people has remained and continues to be reflected by their heritage features, either as an artefact or built structures. It is these heritage features and their impact that bound the African people together and will determine their destiny amongst contemporary societies. The current reawakening of the socio-cultural values of the African societies has provoked a rethink on the imposed culture and architectural edifices across the continent. For securing the future of African people and thus their heritage, there is the need for contemporary heritage discourse to be further broadened beyond the categorisation of tangible and intangible heritages. Rather, the heritage discourse should be an integrated whole that evolved into features with physical and spiritual impact on our environment.
Alternative tourism is a form of sustainable tourism and specifically concern with the responsive utilisation of heritage resources, and in this case, are the resources of indigenous communities within the Sub-Saharan Region of Africa. Van Zyl [61] argued on the significant place of tourism in the conservation of cultural heritage in South Africa. He further argued that global tourists are craving for responsive tourism that support conservation of cultural and natural resource. The preservation of these resources could serve as an impetus for cultural identity and sustenance. Nnabuogor [62] stated that alternative tourism is mainly an individualised plan to gain experiences within a host community or setting about their culture and environment. Alternative tourism emphasises social, natural and indigenous communities value systems. Here the alternative form of tourism provides opportunities for both the host and the tourist in a sustainable manner.
Moukala and Odiaua observed that Africa being the cradle of human civilization and blessed with abundant natural and cultural heritage is not proportionately represented on the World Heritage List. Therefore, at the 2016 Tanzanian conference, where the Ngorongoro Declaration on African sustainable development of heritage features was made has now become the platform of most sustainable heritage tourism development [53]. These heritage features with the distinct architectural identity indeed form the essence of socio-cultural tourist arrivals. Thereby serving as a medium for identifying with the African culture, the built heritage and the socio-cultural landscape of the indigenous communities.
Nigeria is one of the four African countries that joined the WHC at its inception in 1974 along with Sudan Niger and DR Congo, however, their proportionate heritage features amongst other continents that have been listed are insignificant [63].
Ifechukwu [64] also posited that African heritage perspectives and their socio-cultural value concepts are premised on extended family, relationships emphasis, communal affluence, mutual concern, respect for elders, compromise, contest and hero adoration. Similarly, is the argument for the human hierarchy of needs being cyclically interconnected rather than hierarchical as postulated by Maslow [65]. It is worthy to contend here that with such a belief system Africans have been managing their resources (tangible and intangible). This has been from time immemorial basically through oral tradition, which is a form of intangible heritage. Therefore, architectural heritage value is considered as both an enduring belief system and an end-state of human existence [41, 66, 67].
Base on the critical variables review in line with the ALHD perspective, the chapter, therefore, proposed an ALHD that is in line with Figure 3 as the framework within which viable discourse on alternative heritage could be sustained. Alternative Heritage Discourse (ALHD) template perspectives are to be strictly base on critical stakeholders’ opinions and preferences, particularly the indigenous communities who serve as the heritage bearers within a cultural landscape, anchored by the experts and supported by the development partners. The apex place of experts in decision making on alternative heritage perspective must be review and the bearers serve as the base of the process pyramid, with partners at the centre and experts at the zenith in processing resource base of the community. However, in exploiting and developing conservation options for any specific site, the process is revised, such that it could start with the expert through the partners and end with the bearers. In other words, in the ALHD perspective, the heritage discourse starts and end with the bearers. This template could encourage sustainability of the resource base and its active sustenance by the bearers for the benefit of all partners under the guidance of the expert.
Alternative heritage discourse template for Sub-Saharan Africa. Source: Authors desk research (2019).
Due to the recent critique of the OUV concept of authenticity ICOMOS-ISCARSAH (2021) in a webinar on authenticity and reconstruction stated that the question of authenticity is a recurring concern in the discourse of heritage and its construction and require continuous critical dialogue for a productive position. Historically, the Venice charter of 1964 projected a Eurocentric view on the material component of heritage. By the Nara document on the authenticity of 1994, it affirms the strategic place of culture in heritage authenticity discourse. Burra charter of 1999 brought about the critical qualities of heritage as intangibles. It clearly shows the evolving discourse and concern demonstrated concerning diverse concern by heritage professionals. As the authenticity question become open to different international views, perspectives are more dynamic and far from the supposedly and imposed roles to determine authenticity for ascertaining OUV of heritage. Material originality definition of wood, masonry and earth for heritage authenticity becomes a challenge given the immaterial location, culture, spirit and form of heritage. It seems that considering authenticity as a “one size fit all” has hit a dead-end in heritage discourse. Therefore, it would be sustainable to provide authenticity understanding in different cultures that could reinforce or question viewpoint on any heritage conservation perspectives. Hence the proposed template for Alternative Heritage Discourse within indigenous cultural landscape communities of Sub-Saharan Africa.
In conclusion, the chapter review contribution has been able to expound the spring board of AHD and the foundational deviations from its set out objectives of asserting the logic of each heritage. The transition of heritage discourse from objective to subjective gradually however merged into one as AHD that birth the first charter of 1964. However, the AHD perspective is at a threshold that will require collective and holistic proponents of the ALHD viewpoint to adduce relevant discourse options for transgenerational sustainability of the heritages. The study further surmised that there is no heritage without the intangible process which could create a tangible product in some instances while in others it is sustained at its immaterial form driven by the people traditions and customs. Socio-cultural value significance therefore should remain the main driving force of true heritage discourse amongst professionals based on indigenous societies and settlements in Sub-Saharan Africa within the ALHD perspective. The advocated perspective should henceforth drive the revised charters, recommendations, principles and protocols of heritage globally concerning their identification, documentation for conservation and listing. Such positions could ensure sustainable heritage management now and in the future amongst indigenous communities of Sub-Saharan Africa. The study, therefore, recommends as follows;
The concept of ALHD should be jointly developed in consultation with all stakeholders within the relevant regional and sub-regional organisation. It would bring about a broad-based contribution that could act as foundational material for ALHD integration into mainstream heritage discourse perspectives.
Professional as key stakeholders are to serve as moderators of such discourse with other relevant stakeholders rather than being the drivers. This is important to avoid falling into the same mould of AHD, where professionals are considered as experts and their opinion serve as the mainstay for heritage-based activities.
The significant place of the socio-cultural value of heritages in consonance with the bearers and partners contribution should be specifically treated as a central concept towards the authenticity of indigenous architectural heritage within Sub-Saharan Africa.
Responsive alternative form of tourism concept should be the platform for tourist arrivals within the Sub-Saharan Region as a sustainability strategy. Essentially all stakeholders mutual benefit analysis should be the main drivers of the alternative form of tourism rather than the mainly monetary profit.
Conservation strategy of indigenous architectural heritage should incorporate traditional and conventional systems within heritage sites and features. Here the traditional systems of consecration, santuarisation, sacralisation and conventions development should act as the drivers for implementation of conventional strategies of preservation, repairs, treatment and maintenance, restoration, adaptation and reconstruction.
In identification, documentation, conservation and tourism development, all stakeholders should be involved from inception to the closing of each project. Here while the bearers should form the base for the initiation of heritage documentation, then the partners and ultimately the experts. During implementation the professionals and government agencies could lead the way, then partners and ultimately the local bearers in execution, as an integrated bottom-top and top-bottom approach.
In future research, the proposed ALHD template could encourage the development of an integrated framework charter that encompasses the thematic, chronological-regional and typological framework perspective of heritage debates as a holistic strategy that is beneficial to all stakeholders. It could be a charter that could guarantees the sustenance of indigenous architectural heritage within Sub-Saharan cultural landscapes. It is expected that further reviews and empirical studies will be undertaken to substantiate the proposed template or create its variant for the continuation of the Alternative Heritage Discourse amongst indigenous communities of Sub-Saharan Africa that should ultimately create an acceptable charter for use in conservation and listing of its unique cultural landscapes as integrated unit(s).
The 1960s were a decade of growing awareness and concern regarding the declining quality of the surface waters of the U.S., most dramatically exemplified when the Cuyahoga River, Ohio caught fire in the summer of 1969. In response, the U.S. Congress passed the Clean Water Act (CWA) in 1972 [1], establishing goals and regulations governing the restoration and maintenance of the nation’s water resources, including coastal regions. The CWA also specifically addressed the need for monitoring water quality. Section 305b of the CWA required states and tribes to survey and periodically report on the overall condition of their surface waters, including coastal waters. In addition to the state programs, numerous other water quality monitoring and research programs were initiated in major estuarine systems, such as Chesapeake Bay, Narragansett Bay, Tampa Bay, and Puget Sound.
\nHowever, for the first two decades of the Act, reviewers consistently highlighted the fact that the approaches used by the states and tribes to monitor conditions were not nationally consistent and the information they reported could not be consolidated into a single assessment of the Nation’s waters [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]. Despite substantial expenditures, regulators were unable to judge the effectiveness of pollution-control legislation [8]. In response to these limitations, the EPA initiated the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP), a research effort that spanned 17 years. These EMAP efforts would eventually evolve into what is now known as EPA’s National Aquatic Resource Surveys (NARS) which continues to optimize approaches to conducting large-scale water quality assessments in lake, river, stream, estuarine and wetland resources across the U.S. This chapter focuses on the estuarine components of the EMAP and NARS assessments. An overview of EPA’s efforts to assess coastal waters is presented in Figure 1. The timeline can be divided into three phases.
\nEPA coastal assessment programs—Development and implementation phases. EMAP, Environmental Mapping and Assessment Program; Regional development: VP, Virginian Province (U.S. NE Atlantic coast); LP, Louisianian Province (Gulf of Mexico coast); CP, Carolinian Province (U.S. SE Atlantic coast); WIP, West Indian Province (South Florida coast); MAIA, Mid-Atlantic Integrated Assessment (Chesapeake, Delaware & Albemarle-Pamlico bays); WP, Western pilot (U.S. Pacific coast); NCA, National Coastal Assessment; Nationwide development phase NCCA, National Coastal Condition Assessment; Nationwide implementation phase.
Beginning in 1990 and continuing for a decade, a series of regional assessments were executed in the major U.S. coastal ecological provinces. These EMAP-Estuaries programs explored innovative methods of conducting coastal assessments and established several of the defining features of EPA’s assessment approach. For instance, EMAP planners adopted probabilistically-derived survey designs that minimized sampling bias, and designated sites that were appropriately weighted to estimate—with confidence intervals—the percentage of a region in good, fair, or poor condition. The early programs also developed a common core of indicators that could be used regionally or nationally to characterize conditions in key components of estuarine ecosystems—the water column, sediment, and benthic and fish communities. The lessons of these efforts were reported in many technical statistical summaries and summary reports, e.g., [9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14], but relatively few of the accounts were prepared with the public reader in mind. This research and developmental phase was led by EPA’s Office of Research and Development (ORD) in partnership with other federal agencies, especially the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), and with some participation of state environmental agencies and academic institutions.
\nIn the second phase, the EMAP-Estuaries program expanded nationally into the National Coastal Assessment, NCA 1999–2006. The NCA was also an EMAP research program, with primary goals of adopting and refining the best techniques developed in the regional studies and applying them to conduct coastal assessments at both national and regional scales [15]. The NCA evaluations continued the approach of assessing four key aspects of estuarine ecosystems, i.e., water quality, sediment quality, and the ecological condition of benthic and fish communities. Of equal importance, the NCA worked to more fully engage the states and tribes in the assessment process; thereby facilitating compliance with Section 305b of the Clean Water Act. As information accrued, the NCA also experimented with ways of analyzing and reporting how coastal conditions changed over time. Four National Coastal Condition Reports (NCCR I–IV) resulted from these efforts [16, 17, 18, 19]. Particular attention was paid to explaining the assessment process and results to the general public.
\nAfter 16 years of research, development, and stakeholder feedback, the coastal monitoring approach was deemed ready for routine deployment, and responsibility for implementation was passed from EPA’s ORD to EPA’s Office of Water (OW). Now renamed as the National Coastal Condition Assessment (NCCA
In short, the EPA and its partners have devised an ambitious and unique approach of conducting multi-scale ecological assessments of the nation’s coastal waters. NCCA and NARS reflect the results of concerted research and a pragmatic willingness to modify techniques and protocols based on lessons learned. Although logistically challenging, incorporating states and tribes in all aspects of the surveys has proved to be a clear success, both by enhancing the assessments and, more importantly, by helping build capacity of the states and tribes to conduct surveys on their own. Finally, the programs provide useful metrics by which environmental managers and legislators could judge the effectiveness of implemented policies. The remainder of this chapter further describes EPA’s approach to assessing coastal waters, focusing primarily on the methods employed in the recent NCCA 2010 and 2015 surveys, which are the most thoroughly documented programs. Significant differences from earlier or later surveys are highlighted to emphasize how evolution shaped EPA’s assessment process. Furthermore, where assessment approaches are similar in estuaries and the Great Lakes, we focus on the estuarine methodology in deference to brevity. Full documentation, data, and reports concerning both estuarine and Great Lakes assessments are available at [22]. The intended audiences for this chapter are knowledgeable scientists and environmental managers interested in reviewing the unique coastal assessment methods developed over 30 years of experimentation.
\nDuring the summer of 2010, nearly 50 field crews visited 1104 pre-selected sampling stations in U.S. estuaries and Great Lakes coastal waters. Onsite, the crews collected environmental data and sampled the water column, sediments, and benthic and fish communities. Preserved samples were shipped to a dozen or so laboratories for analysis, and laboratory and field data were ultimately compiled into databases for analysis and reporting. In the following sub-sections, we outline the NCCA procedures used to select sampling stations, collect samples and information onsite, and assess and report ecological conditions at various scales. Further details regarding the implementation and evolution of assessment methods are described in Section 3.
\nThe NCCA employed a rigorous design process to meet several key assessment goals. First, the coastal waters to be assessed—the
Next, sampling sites were selected using a probabilistic, stratified survey design. That is, the target region was divided into
Location of the 1104 sites sampled in the 2010 NCCA survey, by reporting region.
Sample sites were then selected probabilistically, but not randomly, using a process termed the Generalized Random Tessellation Survey (GRTS) design [23]. The GRTS method employs an intricate algorithm that ensures uniform and unbiased station placement, thereby minimizing clumping that may result if sites were selected using a purely randomized approach. A weighting factor, called the
Finally, the survey design procedure identified both “base” and “oversample” locations. Sampling was mandatory at the base sites, and oversample sites were designated as replacements for inaccessible base sites or to be used by states in other regional assessments or enhancements. At least 50 base sites were allocated to each of the five reporting regions and to strata receiving an enhanced assessment. A sample size of 50 sites was considered adequate to yield results with reasonable statistical confidence [23]. Ten percent of the base sites were designated as “revisit sites”, to be sampled twice during the same summer period in order to estimate intra-site variability. Additionally, 25% of sites were identified as “return sites”—stations to be repeatedly reassessed over the course of four subsequent NCCA surveys. These return sites increase the ability to quantify temporal variance and to aid in detecting change over time [24]. Further details of the entire NCCA site selection process is available in a non-technical overview of monitoring design topics provided online [25].
\nThe 2010 NCCA survey was a highly orchestrated campaign mounted to assess the nation’s coastal waters. Implementation included training field crews, documenting sampling and analysis methods, collecting information and physical samples onsite, coordinating sample analysis, building databases, and performing quality assurance (QA) reviews.
\nNearly 50 field crews composed of state, tribal, EPA personnel, and contractor staff, were deployed to collect samples and information during a summer
National Coastal Condition Assessment Indicators | \n|
---|---|
Temperature (°C) Salinity (ppt) Dissolved oxygen—DO (mg/L) pH Secchi depth (m) Total organic carbon—TOC (%) % Silt/clay (grainsize) Chlorophyll Ammonium (mg N/L) Nitrate plus nitrite (mg N/L) Nitrite (mg N/L) Dissolved inorganic nitrogen—DIN (mg N/L) Total nitrogen—TN (mg N/L) Dissolved inorganic phosphate—DIP (mg P/L) Total phosphorus—TP (mg P/L) Amphipod survival bioassay Estuarine test organisms: \n \n Great Lakes test organism: \n | \n|
Diversity and abundance of benthic macroinvertebrates Diversity and abundance of fish | \n|
Mercury in fish plugs; algal toxins (microcystin and cylindrospermopsin) and enterococcus in water | \n|
PCBs, PBDEs and PFCs in fish tissue (Great Lakes only) | \n
Indicators measured in the National Coastal Condition Assessment (NCCA) surveys.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Status and Trends Program analytes. Concentrations reported as dry weight of sediments and wet weight of tissue.
The field data were submitted as either physical or electronic data sheets to NCCA headquarters for compilation. Preserved water, sediment, and fish samples were shipped to approve national or state laboratories for analysis and results were submitted to NCCA headquarters. Each site generated hundreds of field and laboratory data values that were organized into files by type (e.g., field data, water quality data, benthic census data, etc.), and maintained as “raw files” in a centralized database by information management specialists. The raw files were then subjected to a stringent two-phase QA review process, first checking for basic compliance with submission requirements (e.g., proper units, range checks, and conformity with standard taxonomic terminology). Any revisions to the raw files were carefully documented, and finalized files were made available at the NCCA public website [26].
\nOne of the hallmarks of the NCCA, and the NCA which preceded it, has been the emphasis on the cooperation and participation of the states and tribes in planning and conducting the assessment within their respective jurisdictions. Not only are states and tribes key to survey implementation, they are the entities responsible under the Clean Water Act (CWA), Section 305b, to report to Congress regarding the extent to which the nation’s waters support the CWA goals. From the research and development phase to the current operational program, numerous workshops and training sessions have been held to build technical expertise regarding monitoring design, sampling, data analysis, and interpretation of results. Through this technical transfer, numerous organizations have modified their local monitoring efforts to incorporate NCCA methods and approaches to assessing the condition of coastal resources. State and tribal partners have been active participants in the ongoing assessments of the performance of current indicators, and in the selection and testing of developmental indicators needed to respond to emerging environmental issues.
\nFollowing the lead of earlier EPA coastal surveys, the NCCA approach had two primary goals regarding assessment: (1) evaluate the
Once sites were evaluated, regional and national conditions were calculated. Recall that the survey design process had assigned each site a weighting factor equal to the area represented by the station. Regional assessments were then expressed as the percent of the region in good, fair, poor, or unassessed condition. For instance, the percent area of the Pacific coast in good condition was simply calculated as the sum of weighting factors associated with Pacific sites rated as good, divided by the total area of the Pacific coastal region (sum of all Pacific site weights). Assessments were calculated for the nation, for the five primary reporting regions (Figure 2), and for any state or designated research area containing a statistically-sufficient number of sites.
\nThe survey design procedure further provided a measure of the uncertainty in the condition estimates, expressed as the 95th percentile confidence interval (CI), which was calculated as the binomial proportion confidence interval adjusted for possible spatial gradients in indicator measurements [23, 27]. Operationally, the confidence intervals were calculated using a complex computer-intensive algorithm, coded in the R-programing language, available at EPA’s Aquatic Resource Monitoring website [25].
\nAs the number of surveys conducted increases, the NCCA documents change over time. Typically, trends have been evaluated by analyzing what happens at an individual location, much as a physician monitors trends in the weight of an individual patient. In contrast, trends for NCCA were evaluated at the population level, i.e., trends in the proportion of sites in good condition. These population level trends were evaluated by noting statistically significant changes, i.e., condition estimates displaying non-overlapping CIs, determined over a series of comparable surveys. Since the early 1990s, coastal survey methods have evolved significantly over time. In some cases, new analyses can be applied to old data. In other cases, methodological differences have precluded trend analyses over the entire 30-year period. Eventually, trends in national assessments will reflect only NCCA surveys conducted from 2010 onward.
\nThe approaches used to communicate survey results in summary reports reflect how the coastal survey approach evolved and innovated. Early regional EMAP surveys were essentially data reports prepared for a technical audience of monitoring practitioners. These terse reports emphasized methodology and reported results in tables, weighted-CDF plots, and bar plots e.g., [11]. While invaluable to technical staff and managers, these statistical summary reports attracted little public attention. In contrast, the national reports summarizing the EMAP-NCA surveys—the National Coastal Condition Reports NCCR I–IV [16, 17, 18, 19]—were primarily prepared to be informative and understandable to the general public. These attractive and sizable documents were organized by region, featured highlights about local issues and showcased abundant photos and illustrations, as well as were available in hardcopy. In particular, NCCR-II and NCCR-III presented maps with site conditions portrayed by color-coded symbols. The NCCR reports’ use of pie charts conveyed assessment results concisely and intuitively, but without adequate expression of uncertainty.
\nBeginning with the NARS-NCCA 2010, the reporting strategy changed substantially to accommodate the approach of conducting relatively standardized assessments on a regular schedule. The reports focused on delivering assessment results concisely and quickly, primarily tailored for a technical audience of environmental managers. The reports are only accessible online and include fewer highlight-sections or explanatory graphics but continue to present material intuitively for public viewing. Graphics prominently display estimates of uncertainty and express change over time (Figure 3). The online 2015 NCCA report (in preparation) notably features an interactive “dashboard” graphic that allows the viewer to select the results in summary form as well as to access the data associated with the display. Importantly, the coastal reporting format is evolving in concert with the reporting approaches of other NARS surveys, thereby facilitating cross-resource assessment and modeling efforts.
\nExamples of coastal survey summary graphics from NCCA national reports highlighting national status in 2010 (A), trends 1999 to 2010 (B), and “dashboard” approach of reporting results (C).
In this section we take a closer look at the methods used to assess the major components of coastal ecosystems—the water column, sediment, and benthic and fish communities. One issue was recognized early in the NCA program when national-scale surveys were undertaken—the U.S. coastal regions are extraordinarily diverse. The northeastern states reflect relatively late deglaciation, featuring minimal run-off from small watersheds into well-mixed coastal waters. Large drowned-river estuaries dominate the mid-Atlantic states, where environmental conditions are heavily influenced by the densely populated coastal communities. Estuaries along the southeastern states and the Gulf of Mexico reflect interaction with large, flat watersheds; these regions are subject to distinct sub-tropical biophysical processes. In contrast, there are far fewer estuaries along the Pacific coast because of the absence of a coastal plain, and coastal processes there are uniquely affected by strong ocean currents and upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich water. How should surveys account for such diversity and differentiate natural from anthropogenic sources and responses?
\nIn response to these challenges, survey planners initially relied on the advice of regional estuarine experts convened to suggest assessment indicators and provide benchmark values used to distinguish good, fair, and poor conditions. In reports we emphasized that these cut-points were appropriate for the surveys only, and generally distinct from regulatory thresholds. For each component assessment, several indicators of condition were evaluated separately and then combined into an overall index. In some cases, as is described below, the initial suite of indicators, indices, and benchmark values were modified and refined based on lessons learned. For instance, local benthic indices were replaced with a single index applicable nationwide; the fish community index was refashioned to better reflect ecological rather than human health conditions; and several human-health indicators were introduced. In the following sections, we describe the indicators and thresholds currently specifically employed in the NCCA surveys while highlight lessons learned from 30 years of experimenting and refining techniques.
\nThe water column is a notoriously dynamic environment. Physical and biological process interact to create rapid and highly localized interactions of light, nutrients, algal growth and predation, and a host of quickly changing abiotic factors. Despite these challenges, deepening concerns regarding cultural eutrophication in coastal waters motivated survey planners to devise a strategy for assessing coastal water quality. Cultural eutrophication is the detrimental degradation of water quality often associated with nutrient over-enrichment [28, 29]. The NCCA assessment approach consisted of employing indicators that measure eutrophication-related symptoms and problems such as nutrient over-enrichment, excessive algal blooms, hypoxia or anoxia, low water transparency, etc. To moderate the inherent variability of such measures, the indicators were then combined into an index that is less dynamic than the individual components.
\n\nTable 2 lists the five core indicators and thresholds used in recent NCCA surveys to assess water quality in estuaries and the Great Lakes. Nutrient and chlorophyll concentrations were measured in surface water, dissolved oxygen levels were determined in bottom water, and water clarity was established at each site. These measures were then combined into a water quality index (WQI) that captured conditions likely to be indicative of problematic eutrophication regardless of when in summer sampling occurred [17]. For instance, the WQI might record excessive dissolved nutrients in early season, excessive algal production and poor water clarity in mid-season or hypoxic, turbid conditions in late season. Essentially, the WQI reflects a “preponderance of evidence”; the index is a more robust indicator of problematic eutrophication symptoms than the core indicators.
\nWater quality indicators | \nEstuary thresholds | \nGreat Lakes thresholds | \n
---|---|---|
\n DIN & TN in surface water DIN used to assess N status in estuaries prior to 2015; TN used thereafter. Water Quality Index (WQI) constructed with DIN in estuaries; with TN in the GL | \n\n NE/SE/Gulf: 0.1, 0.5 West: 0.35, 0.5 Tropical: 0.05, 0.1 \n 25th, 50th, 75th percentiles of NCCA 2010 TN values | \nNitrogen not assessed in the Great Lakes | \n
\n DIP & TP in surface water DIP used to assess P status in estuaries prior to 2015; TP used thereafter. Water Quality Index (WQI) constructed with DIP in estuaries; with TP in the GL | \n\n NE/SE/Gulf: 0.01, 0.05 West: 0.07, 1.0 Tropical: 0.005, 0.01 \n | \n\n \n Michigan: 0.007, 0.01 Saginaw/West Erie: 0.015, 0.032 Mid & East Erie/Ontario: 0.01, 0.015 | \n
\n Chlorophyll | \n\n \n NE/SE/Gulf/West: 5.0, 20.0 Tropical: 0.5, 1.0 | \n\n \n Michigan: 1.8, 2.6 Saginaw/Erie West: 3.6, 6.0 Mid & East Erie/Ontario: 2.6, 3.6 | \n
\n Dissolved oxygen (DO) in bottom water | \n\n All coastal regions: 5.0, 2.0 | \n\n \n All lakes and basins: 5.0, 2.0 | \n
\n \n \n | \n\n Naturally turbid waters: 10%, 5% Normally turbid waters: 20%, 10% SAV restoration priority: 40%, 20% | \n\n Michigan: 6.7, 5.3 Saginaw/West Erie: 3.9, 2.1 Mid & East Erie/Ontario: 5.3, 3.9 | \n
\n Constructed based on the ratings of the measured component WQ metrics (five metrics in estuaries, including DIN & DIP; four metrics in the Great Lakes) | \n\n | \n\n | \n
Indicators and thresholds employed in the NCCA 2010 to assess water quality in estuaries and the Great Lakes.
Trans = exp(−Kd); where Kd is PAR extinction factor, calculated via regression of exponential attenuation of PAR intensity Iz/Io vs depth z, i.e., Beer\'s law: Iz/Io = exp(−Kd*z).
Thresholds generally varied by region. For instance, less stringent nutrient thresholds were specified for the West coast region, which experiences natural upwelling in summer [30], and more conservative guidelines were applied when assessing the tropical waters of southern Florida to protect submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) beds. Assessment methods differed slightly when evaluating nutrients and water clarity in estuaries and the Great Lakes, recognizing the distinct ecologies and assessment histories in these environments. See details of the coastal water quality approach at pp. 11–15 of reference [19].
\nSediment quality indicators | \nEstuary thresholds | \nGreat Lakes thresholds | \n
---|---|---|
\n For estuaries: calculate ERM-Q and mean ERM-Q (mERM-Q); For Great Lakes: calculate PEC-Q and mean PEC-Q (mPEC-Q). For estuaries only: (1) calculate LRM factor for each of 36 analytes with fitting parameters; (2) select largest factor LRMmax; (3) calculate LRM Pmax\n | \nmERM-Q ≤ 0.1 & LRM Pmax ≤ 0.05 mERM-Q > 0.1 & ≤ 0.5 or LRM Pmax > 0.5 & ≤ 0.75 mERM-Q > 0.5 or LRM Pmax > 0.5 | \nmPEC-Q ≤ 0.1 mPEC-Q > 0.1 and ≤ 0.6 mean PEC-Q > 0.6 | \n
\n % Survival of amphipods after 10-day exposure to site sediment, compared with survival in clean control sediment Amphipods tested for estuarine sediments: | \n||
\n Constructed based on the ratings of sediment contaminant and sediment toxicity metrics The assessment criteria are the same for estuarine and Great Lakes sites | \n
Indicators and thresholds employed in the NCCA 2010 to assess sediment quality in estuaries and the Great Lakes.
ERM-Q , conc/ERM for estuarine sites only, for 28 analytes with ERM values; PEC-Q , conc/PEC for Great Lakes only, for 9 analytes with PEC values (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Ni, Zn, PAHs, PCBs); mean ERM-Q , ∑ERM-Q/n; mean PEC-Q = ∑PEC-Q/n; where n = number or analytes.
LRM factor calculated as follows, for 36 analytes with fitting factors B0 and B1 (Field et al., 2002).
LRM Pmax = 0.11 + 0.33*LRMmax + 0.4*LRMmax\n2.
The NCCA approach of assessing nutrient status in estuaries continues to evolve. Early surveys measured nutrients as dissolved inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus (DIN and DIP). While DIN and DIP concentrations are valid indicators of nutrient enrichment status, they are unreliable measures of nutrient availability later in the season because they are generally assimilated into algal biomass in spring and early summer [19]. This is particularly problematic for NCCA surveys, which sample throughout the summer index period. In contrast, total nitrogen and phosphorus (TN and TP) are less variable and are related to chlorophyll concentrations [31]. Consequently, TN and TP were added as core indicators beginning in 2010 and were used to evaluate nutrient status in subsequent NCCA surveys. Since regional TN and TP thresholds have not yet been established, TN and TP were treated as exploratory indicators, rated as low, moderate, high, and very high based on the 25th, 50th, and 75th quartile values of the measured 2010 TN and TP values. The water quality index (WQI) continued to be calculated with DIN and DIP as described in Table 2, reflecting the key role of dissolved nutrients in eutrophication processes [17, 31].
\nContaminants from agricultural, industrial, and nonpoint sources find their way to coastal waters where they may adsorb onto suspended particles and settle to the sediment. There, metals and organic pollutants are ingested by benthic-dwelling organisms and may become concentrated throughout the food web and adversely affect fish, pelagic mammals, and human consumers of aquatic organisms. To monitor sediment contamination, all EPA coastal assessments since the 1990s followed the approach of NOAA’s Status and Trends program [32] and collected sediment grab samples and measured a suite of 74 metal, PAH, PCB, and pesticide contaminants in surficial sediment samples (Table 1). The impacts of the pollutants on benthic organisms were evaluated against the effects-based sediment quality guidelines, ERL (effects range low) and ERM (effects range median) [33]. ERL values are the concentration levels below which adverse bioeffects are unlikely, and ERM values signify the concentration above which adverse effects are likely. Sediments were also characterized by measuring grain size and total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations and were further tested for toxicity arising from either natural or anthropogenic sources by exposing amphipods to sediments in laboratory assays [34, 35].
\nPrior to the NCCA 2010, estuarine surveys evaluated sediment quality based on three core metrics: (1) sediment contaminants were evaluated as good, fair, or poor based on the number of ERL or ERM exceedances evident at a site; (2) toxicity was rated as good or poor if the survival rate of the amphipod
Several modifications were introduced into NCCA surveys conducted in 2010 and later. Pollutant levels in estuaries were expressed as mean ERM quotients (mERMQ)—the ratio of a contaminant concentration to its ERM value, designated as mERMQ [36, 37]. Estuarine sediment contaminants were evaluated in a more nuanced manner, using the mERMQ and a logistic regression model approach [38] to better estimate the adverse effects of pollutants on benthic organisms. Estuarine sediment toxicity tests were primarily conducted using the amphipod species
All EPA estuarine surveys since the 1990s collected sediment grab samples of benthic macroinvertebrate communities for assessment of ecological condition based on measures of diversity, species richness, and dominance. The benthos is a key component of estuarine ecosystems, serving as important food source for higher trophic levels and maintaining sediment and water quality. Benthic communities respond to contaminant concentrations, dissolved oxygen stress, salinity fluctuations and physical disturbance, and are relatively immobile and therefore integrate the effect of adverse conditions over months and years.
\nSeparate regional, benthic-community condition indices were developed during the EMAP programs of the 1990s, including for the Virginian [41], Carolinian [42] and Louisianan [43, 44] biogeographic provinces. Later, an index was created for the Acadian Province (Maine through Cape Cod waters) [45]. No specific index was developed for the Pacific coast; rather, sites were assessed based on observed vs. expected species richness [30]. These benthic indices were used in estuarine assessments prior to NCCA 2015. Benthic communities in the Great Lakes were evaluated using an oligochaete trophic index (OTI) based on the classification of oligochaete species by their tolerance to organic enrichment [46, 47]. Table 4 presents a summary of these regional benthic indices. The NCCA 2010 Technical Appendix [40] provides further detail regarding the development and calculation of the indices.
\nRegion/province | \nMethod | \nComponent metrics | \nReferences | \n
---|---|---|---|
Northeast/Acadian | \nLogistic regression analysis | \nShannon H\' (diversity) MN_ES(50)0.05 (species tolerance index) % Capitellid polychaetes (abundance) | \n[39] | \n
Northeast/Virginian | \nDiscriminant analysis | \nSalinity adjusted Gleason D (diversity) Salinity adjusted % tubificid (abundance) % Spionids (abundance) | \n[35] | \n
Southeast/Carolinian | \nB-IBI approach | \nMean abundance Mean number of taxa 100% abundance of 2 dominant taxa % Abundance of pollution sensitive taxa | \n[36] | \n
Gulf/Louisianian | \nDiscriminant analysis | \n% Expected diversity (Shannon H\') Mean abundance of tubificids % Capitellids % Bivalves % Amphipods | \n[37, 38] | \n
Pacific coast | \nRegression | \nObserved vs expected species richness | \n[11, 27] | \n
Great Lakes | \nAbundance-weighted tolerance equation | \nOligochaete tolerance scores (based on organic enrichment) | \n[40, 41] | \n
National estuarine | \nFactor analysis | \nShannon H\' (diversity) Species richness AMBI (abundance-weighted pollution tolerance) | \n[42, 43] | \n
Summary of methods, metrics, and thresholds used to construct regional benthic indices used to evaluate assess coastal waters.
The national M-AMBI index was developed for the NCCA 2015 and future surveys.
While the separate estuarine indices performed well in the region for which they were developed, they were developed using different statistical models and metrics. Because the different indices might not be comparable, combining the separate indices into a nationwide evaluation tool was problematic. In response, a national-scale index called M-AMBI (multivariate-AZTI marine biotic index) was adapted to provide a single index applicable to all U.S. estuarine waters [48, 49]. This index is based on benthic indices that were successfully deployed in Europe and elsewhere [50, 51]. AMBI is an abundance-weighted tolerance index, while M-AMBI combines AMBI, species richness and species diversity together using factor analysis calculated for a given habitat. The resulting index was shown to be comparable to several local indices [49] and was better correlated with land use variables [52]. The resulting scores are based on comparison of a sites’ position along a pollution gradient [49].
\nMany aquatic organisms in coastal regions are inadvertent inheritors of a legacy of disturbances often associated with human practices. For instance, chemical pollutants from farms and cities delivered to coastal waters enter the food web and accumulate, threatening fish and higher trophic-level communities, humans included. To assess the ecological danger to aquatic communities, EPA’s coastal surveys since the 1990s have measured concentrations of metals, PCBs, PAHs, and pesticides (Table 1) in demersal and pelagic fish collected at sampling stations. Prior to the NCCA 2010 survey, sites were evaluated by comparing contaminant concentrations against human health fish-consumption advisory thresholds as a surrogate for ecologically-relevant benchmarks [53]. When both humans and wildlife were similarly sensitive to specific contaminant exposures, the surrogate used for the assessment was meaningful. Beginning with the NCCA 2010 survey, an
The ecological risk approach assessed contaminant levels in whole-body fish tissue following the methods of EPA’s ecological risk assessment [54]. The primary goal of this NCCA index, therefore, was to evaluate the potential risk that consuming contaminated fish poses to predators other than humans. Because such “wild” predators consume the entire fish, the NCCA protocol measured contaminant concentrations in the entire fish collected in the survey, rather than measuring contaminant levels in just the fillet—the protocol formerly used when human health was the focus. Operationally, the process first identified mammalian, avian, and piscivorous “receptors,” i.e., predator species that consume coastal fish and could be adversely affected by contaminants in the prey-fish. Table 5 lists the freshwater and marine receptors selected for analysis based on their diet (predominantly fish) and availability of data in the literature. The literature studies were reviewed to identify the Lowest Observed Adverse Effects Level or LOAEL for each receptor, that is, the contaminant concentration likely to elicit toxicological effects. The minimum contaminant LOAEL found for any member of a receptor group was designated as an impairment threshold, and was used to rate survey sites as good, fair, or poor (Table 6). Because of the very different methods used in the human-health and ecological-risk approaches, the NCCA assessments cannot be directly compared with earlier survey results and cannot be used to inform human consumption advisories. Refer to the NCCA 2010 technical appendix for further details [34].
\nAvian receptors | \nFreshwater mammalian receptors | \nMarine mammalian receptors | \nFreshwater fish receptors | \nMarine fish receptors | \n
---|---|---|---|---|
Great Blue Heron | \nRiver Otter | \nHarbor Seal | \nLargemouth Bass | \nBluefin Tuna | \n
Osprey | \nMink | \nBottlenose Dolphin | \nFlorida Gar | \nYellowfin Tuna | \n
Bald Eagle | \n— | \nWalrus | \nMuskellunge | \nShortfin Mako | \n
Herring Gull | \n— | \n— | \nSnakehead | \nMackerel Tuna | \n
Belted Kingfisher | \n— | \n— | \nLake Walleye | \nSwordfish | \n
Brown Pelican | \n— | \n— | \n— | \n— | \n
Higher trophic-level piscivores potentially at risk from consuming contaminated prey fish.
Contaminant | \nWhole-body tissue concentration (μg/dry g) by receptor group | \n||
---|---|---|---|
Lowest observed adverse effect level (LOAEL) | \n|||
Mammal | \nAvian | \nFish | \n|
Arsenic (inorganic) | \n3.8 | \n9.2 | \n0.7 | \n
Cadmium | \n32.1 | \n14.0 | \n3828 | \n
Mercury (methyl) | \n1.1 | \n0.1 | \n1.4 | \n
Selenium | \n2.3 | \n0.6 | \n33.6 | \n
Chlordane | \n55.4 | \n2.9 | \n— | \n
DDTs | \n28.0 | \n1.6 | \n7.1 | \n
Dieldrin | \n1.2 | \n0.3 | \n1.6 | \n
Endosulfan | \n42.8 | \n43.2 | \n0.003 | \n
Endrin | \n5.6 | \n0.1 | \n3.9 | \n
Heptachlor epoxide | \n7.5 | \n6.3 | \n81.1 | \n
Hexachlorobenzene | \n14.0 | \n0.6 | \n0.04 | \n
Lindane | \n280 | \n2.4 | \n376 | \n
Mirex | \n4.6 | \n0.7 | \n9.9 | \n
Toxaphene | \n280 | \n3.6 | \n0.03 | \n
PCBs | \n3.9 | \n1.3 | \n2.0 | \n
No contaminant concentration exceeds a LOAEL for any receptor group | \nAt least one contaminant concentration exceeds a LOAEL for one receptor group | \nAt least one contaminant concentration exceeds a LOAEL for two or more receptor groups | \n
Whole-body tissue contaminant LOAEL concentrations (μg/dry g) by receptor group.
Along with evaluating the ecological condition of several major ecological compartments of coastal ecosystems, the NCCA also addressed several matters regarding human health and emerging issues. For instance, in the Great Lakes with the support of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) [55], the concentrations in fish tissue of the contaminants mercury, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), flame retardant polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), and perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) were measured in the Great Lakes NCCA surveys and evaluated against human health screening values [40]. The NCCA also initiated a survey-wide monitoring program quantifying aqueous concentrations of the algal toxins microcystin and cylindrospermopsin, as well as mercury in fish muscle. Several exploratory studies were also undertaken to address important issues such as ocean acidification and the distribution of micro-plastics in coastal water. Newer assessment techniques are also under investigation, such as exploring the use of underwater cameras and environmental genetic screening to monitor the expansion of invasive organisms in the Great Lakes.
\nIn retrospect, the mandate issued to the U.S. EPA by the Clean Water Act in 1972 to compile a national assessment of water quality was a bold and challenging directive. No blueprint was available to indicate the best approach of conducting a large-scale assessment program. Tactics regarding monitoring designs, sampling strategies, indicators, thresholds, assessment protocols, etc. all needed to be developed from scratch. The EPA adopted a pragmatic approach to assessing coastal regions, exploring and testing methodologies regionally, and then gradually building a national program based on the best practices learned over 30 years of experimentation. While the NARS-coastal surveys and assessments are not perfect, they represent the first nationally consistent effort, based on current practices, to assess the Nation’s coastal waters through time. The data and results represent information available for evaluating national policy and a basis for the scientific community to evaluate coastal waters from many perspectives.
\nThe evolution of methodologies and approaches for the NCCA is an ongoing process. Future surveys will continue the practices of adapting current methods to the latest best practices and the adaptation of new strategies, while striving to strike a balance between consistency and creative exploration. The continued importance of partnerships among federal, state and tribal agencies cannot be over-emphasized in achieving the aims of the monitoring program. Such cooperation has proven to be both efficient and productive, and the enhanced capacity of states and tribes to conduct assessments independently is particularly valuable in assuring a sustainable monitoring program. Particularly striking has been the deep commitment of many individuals, research scientists, program planners, crew members, information managers, analysts, communicators, and partners, who have offered feedback and criticism to continuously improve the coastal assessment process. Finally, the development and evolution of coastal assessment expertise described in this chapter is similarly evident in sister NARS programs that assess lakes, rivers and streams, and wetlands. Descriptions of these programs are presented elsewhere in this book.
\nThese coastal assessments were conducted in partnership with many state and tribal agencies, the National Oceanic and Administration (NOAA), the National Park Service (NPS), as well as other federal agencies. EPA offices included the Office of Research and Development, the Office of Water, Great Lakes National Program Office, and EPA Regional Monitoring Coordinators from Regions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, and 10. We note the particular efforts of EPA colleagues who contributed to the conception, administration and operation of the coastal surveys, including Kevin Summers, John Paul, Virginia Hansen, Treda Grayson, Sarah Lehmann, and Greg Colianni and many others too numerous to name. Thanks also to EPA colleagues Don Cobb, Charlie Strobel, and Hal Walker who reviewed the chapter. We especially wish to acknowledge the truly invaluable assistance of the hundreds of participants who conducted the assessments, including the field crews, biologists, taxonomists, statisticians, analysts, program administrators, regional coordinators, project managers, quality control officers, and reviewers.
\nThe authors declare no conflict of interest.
The views expressed in this chapter are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
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Circulating levels of fluoride in blood and urine in children have also been linked quantitatively to significantly lower IQ. Other human and animal studies indicate that fluoride is a developmental neurotoxicant and that it operates in utero. Economic impacts of IQ loss have been quantified. The objective was to use data from the meta-analysis and other studies to estimate a daily dose of fluoride that would protect all children from lowered IQ, and to estimate economic impacts. We used two methods: traditional lowest-observed-adverse-effect (LOAEL)/no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL); and benchmark dose (BMD). We used 3 mg/L in drinking water as an “adverse effect concentration,” with reported fluoride intakes from food, in the LOAEL/NOAEL method. We used the available dose–response data for the BMD analysis. Arsenic, iodine, and lead levels were controlled for in studies we used. BMD analysis shows the possible safe dose to protect against a five-point IQ loss is between 0.0014 and 0.050 mg/day. The LOAEL/NOAEL safe dose range estimate is 0.0042–0.16 mg/day. The economic impact for IQ loss among US children is loss of tens of billions of dollars.",book:{id:"5894",slug:"neurotoxins",title:"Neurotoxins",fullTitle:"Neurotoxins"},signatures:"John William Hirzy, Paul Connett, Quanyong Xiang, Bruce Spittle\nand David Kennedy",authors:[{id:"215103",title:"Dr.",name:"J. William",middleName:null,surname:"Hirzy",slug:"j.-william-hirzy",fullName:"J. William Hirzy"},{id:"215105",title:"Dr.",name:"Paul",middleName:null,surname:"Connett",slug:"paul-connett",fullName:"Paul Connett"},{id:"215110",title:"Prof.",name:"Quanyong",middleName:null,surname:"Xiang",slug:"quanyong-xiang",fullName:"Quanyong Xiang"},{id:"215111",title:"Dr.",name:"David",middleName:null,surname:"Kennedy",slug:"david-kennedy",fullName:"David Kennedy"},{id:"221561",title:"Dr.",name:"Bruce",middleName:null,surname:"Spittle",slug:"bruce-spittle",fullName:"Bruce Spittle"}]},{id:"55785",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.69433",title:"Botulinum Neurotoxin: A Multifunctional Protein for the Development of New Therapeutics",slug:"botulinum-neurotoxin-a-multifunctional-protein-for-the-development-of-new-therapeutics",totalDownloads:1420,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:4,abstract:"Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) is a major therapeutic agent licensed in neurological indications such as dystonia and spasticity. In recent years, its use has steadily increased in other neurological areas and new therapeutic areas and also in the aesthetic setting. Paradoxically, BoNT is also the causative agent of the disease botulism and a potential bioterrorism toxin. The BoNT family of toxins comprised more than 40 individual members, classified into 7 serotypes and are produced by Gram-positive obligate anaerobic bacteria. BoNTs are enzymatic multi-modular proteins with a complex multistep mechanism of action. Their target site is at peripheral neurons, particularly the neuromuscular junction, at which they inhibit acetylcholine neurotransmission. Despite intense activity in the BoNT field, today there are still gaps in knowledge both in clinical practice and in basic research. The discovery of the structure-function of BoNT and its domains has allowed rational design of new features using molecular engineering. The diversity of BoNT molecules, both natural and engineered, is an invaluable pool from which to design future new therapeutics with unique pharmacological properties for current and novel indications.",book:{id:"5894",slug:"neurotoxins",title:"Neurotoxins",fullTitle:"Neurotoxins"},signatures:"Elena Fonfria",authors:[{id:"199020",title:"Dr.",name:"Elena",middleName:null,surname:"Fonfria",slug:"elena-fonfria",fullName:"Elena Fonfria"}]},{id:"62697",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79476",title:"Sleep and Health: Role of Dopamine",slug:"sleep-and-health-role-of-dopamine",totalDownloads:1007,totalCrossrefCites:3,totalDimensionsCites:3,abstract:"Introduction: Sleep is an important part of people’s lives and proper sleep is a prerequisite for good health.",book:{id:"7256",slug:"dopamine-health-and-disease",title:"Dopamine",fullTitle:"Dopamine - Health and Disease"},signatures:"Kourkouta Lambrini, Ouzounakis Petros, Papathanassiou Ioanna,\nKoukourikos Konstantinos, Tsaras Konstantinos, Iliadis Christos,\nMonios Alexandros and Tsaloglidou Areti",authors:[{id:"204594",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Lambrini",middleName:null,surname:"Kourkouta",slug:"lambrini-kourkouta",fullName:"Lambrini Kourkouta"},{id:"204595",title:"Mr.",name:"Petros",middleName:null,surname:"Ouzounakis",slug:"petros-ouzounakis",fullName:"Petros Ouzounakis"},{id:"204596",title:"Dr.",name:"Areti",middleName:null,surname:"Tsaloglidou",slug:"areti-tsaloglidou",fullName:"Areti Tsaloglidou"},{id:"204597",title:"MSc.",name:"Konstantinos",middleName:null,surname:"Koukourikos",slug:"konstantinos-koukourikos",fullName:"Konstantinos Koukourikos"},{id:"204598",title:"Dr.",name:"Konstantinos",middleName:null,surname:"Tsaras",slug:"konstantinos-tsaras",fullName:"Konstantinos Tsaras"},{id:"204599",title:"Mr.",name:"Christos",middleName:null,surname:"Iliadis",slug:"christos-iliadis",fullName:"Christos Iliadis"},{id:"204600",title:"Mr.",name:"Alexandros",middleName:null,surname:"Monios",slug:"alexandros-monios",fullName:"Alexandros Monios"},{id:"204602",title:"Dr.",name:"Ioanna",middleName:"V.",surname:"Papathanasiou",slug:"ioanna-papathanasiou",fullName:"Ioanna Papathanasiou"}]},{id:"63750",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.80711",title:"Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors and Their Role in Chronic Pain Management",slug:"serotonin-reuptake-inhibitors-and-their-role-in-chronic-pain-management",totalDownloads:1237,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:3,abstract:"Serotonin has a particular place in the modulation of pain. Experimental studies have described 5-HT1–7 receptors and their effects on facilitation or inhibition of nociceptive input. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors showed efficient and safer than tricyclic antidepressants in neuropathic pain. Although there is evidence regarding the beneficial impact of SSRIs in the multimodal acute pain management, studies are still searching for the potentially favorable effect of these drugs in the prevention of chronic postoperative pain. The scope of this chapter would be to update the knowledge regarding serotonin involving in pain pathways and to highlight the importance and contribution of serotonin reuptake inhibitors in the multimodal pain management schemes.",book:{id:"6679",slug:"serotonin",title:"Serotonin",fullTitle:"Serotonin"},signatures:"Adela Hilda Onuțu, Dan Sebastian Dîrzu and Cristina Petrișor",authors:null}],mostDownloadedChaptersLast30Days:[{id:"63723",title:"Oxidative Polymerization of Dopamine: A High-Definition Multifunctional Coatings for Electrospun Nanofibers - An Overview",slug:"oxidative-polymerization-of-dopamine-a-high-definition-multifunctional-coatings-for-electrospun-nano",totalDownloads:1953,totalCrossrefCites:5,totalDimensionsCites:10,abstract:"The invention that catecholamines undergo oxidative polymerization under alkaline conditions and form adhesive nanocoatings on wide variety of substrates has ushered their potential utility in engineering and biomedical applications. The oxidative polymerization of catecholamines can be triggered by light, chemical and physical methods, thus representing one of the widely explored surface coating methods. The overall objectives of this chapter are to compile the various methods of accomplishing surface coatings and compare the structural diversity of catecholamines. The progress achieved so far on polydopamine (pDA) coatings on electrospun polymers will be discussed. Finally, we will summarize the research efforts on catecholamine coatings for biomedical applications as well as their potential as a high definition coating method.",book:{id:"7256",slug:"dopamine-health-and-disease",title:"Dopamine",fullTitle:"Dopamine - Health and Disease"},signatures:"Rajamani Lakshminarayanan, Srinivasan Madhavi and Christina Poh\nChoo Sim",authors:[{id:"256023",title:"Associate Prof.",name:"Lakshminarayanan",middleName:null,surname:"Rajamani",slug:"lakshminarayanan-rajamani",fullName:"Lakshminarayanan Rajamani"},{id:"270706",title:"Prof.",name:"Madhavi",middleName:null,surname:"Srinivasan",slug:"madhavi-srinivasan",fullName:"Madhavi Srinivasan"},{id:"270707",title:"Dr.",name:"Christina Poh Choo",middleName:null,surname:"Sim",slug:"christina-poh-choo-sim",fullName:"Christina Poh Choo Sim"}]},{id:"59036",title:"Nursing Care for Persons with Drug Addiction",slug:"nursing-care-for-persons-with-drug-addiction",totalDownloads:2150,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,abstract:"Persons with drug addiction (PDDs) may exhibit symptoms affecting the central nervous system. Multidisciplinary treatment teams may offer the most updated treatment and care. Pharmacotherapy is one standard treatment, effective in managing psychotic symptoms with supportive psychosocial interventions. As part of the health-care team, nurses deal with PDD on a 24-hour basis. Quality nursing care is essential for improving quality of life, health status, and continued abuse-free status of PDD.",book:{id:"6404",slug:"drug-addiction",title:"Drug Addiction",fullTitle:"Drug Addiction"},signatures:"Ek-uma Imkome",authors:[{id:"219235",title:"Associate Prof.",name:"Ek-Uma",middleName:null,surname:"Imkome",slug:"ek-uma-imkome",fullName:"Ek-Uma Imkome"}]},{id:"59317",title:"Effect of Alcohol on Brain Development",slug:"effect-of-alcohol-on-brain-development",totalDownloads:1208,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:"In the world, 3.3 million deaths occur every year due to harmful use of alcohol; this represents 5.9% of all deaths. Ethanol metabolites’ production and their post-translation modification are one of the proposed mechanisms that lead to neuronal toxicity. The projected neurochemical changes in chronic alcohol drinkers may be due to an imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters. Interaction of alcohol with GABA and glutamate receptors (NMDA and AMPA) resulted in diverse adaptive changes in gene expression through neuronal pathways leading to alcohol toxicity. Alcohol consumption in an individual leads to biochemical changes that are correlated with complex inflammatory signaling pathways such as phosphorylation of proteins, synthesis of nitric oxide (NO), NF-kappaB and MAP kinase pathways in certain regions of the brain. Ethanol exposure activates neurons and microglial cells that lead to release of neuroimmune factors like high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and certain cytokines involved in immune responses leading to neuroimmune signaling in the brain. Epigenetic modification of DNA and histones may lead to neuronal gene expression, thus regulating ethanol toxicity. Researchers attempt to modulate therapies that can help to foil alcohol toxicity and support the development of original neuronal cells that have been injured or degenerated by alcohol exposure.",book:{id:"6404",slug:"drug-addiction",title:"Drug Addiction",fullTitle:"Drug Addiction"},signatures:"Farhin Patel and Palash Mandal",authors:[{id:"217215",title:"Dr.",name:"Palash",middleName:null,surname:"Mandal",slug:"palash-mandal",fullName:"Palash Mandal"},{id:"219333",title:"Ms.",name:"Farhin",middleName:null,surname:"Patel",slug:"farhin-patel",fullName:"Farhin Patel"}]},{id:"61035",title:"Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Human Glutamatergic Neurons as a Platform for Mechanistic Assessment of Inducible Excitotoxicity in Drug Discovery",slug:"induced-pluripotent-stem-cell-derived-human-glutamatergic-neurons-as-a-platform-for-mechanistic-asse",totalDownloads:1251,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,abstract:"Since the guiding principles of Replace, Reduce, and Refine were published, wider context-of-use for alternatives to animal testing have emerged. Induced pluripotent stem cell-derived human glutamatergic-enriched cortical neurons can be leveraged as 2- and 3-dimensional platforms to enable candidate drug screening. Uniquely so, 2-dimensional models are useful considering that they exhibit spontaneous firing, while, 3-dimensional models show spontaneous synchronized calcium transient oscillations. Here, the limitations of selected induced acute seizure models as well as the early utilization of fully differentiated glutamatergic neuron models for interrogation of inducible excitotoxicity following exposure to neuromodulators will be described. The context of use for candidate biomarkers of inducible seizure is also discussed.",book:{id:"5894",slug:"neurotoxins",title:"Neurotoxins",fullTitle:"Neurotoxins"},signatures:"Yafei Chen",authors:[{id:"201274",title:"M.Sc.",name:"Yafei",middleName:null,surname:"Chen",slug:"yafei-chen",fullName:"Yafei Chen"}]},{id:"65286",title:"Introductory Chapter: From Measuring Serotonin Neurotransmission to Evaluating Serotonin Post-Receptor Signaling Transduction",slug:"introductory-chapter-from-measuring-serotonin-neurotransmission-to-evaluating-serotonin-post-recepto",totalDownloads:1142,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:null,book:{id:"6679",slug:"serotonin",title:"Serotonin",fullTitle:"Serotonin"},signatures:"Ying Qu",authors:[{id:"94028",title:"Dr.",name:"Ying",middleName:null,surname:"Qu",slug:"ying-qu",fullName:"Ying Qu"}]}],onlineFirstChaptersFilter:{topicId:"1115",limit:6,offset:0},onlineFirstChaptersCollection:[],onlineFirstChaptersTotal:0},preDownload:{success:null,errors:{}},subscriptionForm:{success:null,errors:{}},aboutIntechopen:{},privacyPolicy:{},peerReviewing:{},howOpenAccessPublishingWithIntechopenWorks:{},sponsorshipBooks:{sponsorshipBooks:[],offset:0,limit:8,total:null},allSeries:{pteSeriesList:[{id:"14",title:"Artificial Intelligence",numberOfPublishedBooks:9,numberOfPublishedChapters:87,numberOfOpenTopics:6,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2633-1403",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79920",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"7",title:"Biomedical Engineering",numberOfPublishedBooks:12,numberOfPublishedChapters:98,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-5343",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71985",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],lsSeriesList:[{id:"11",title:"Biochemistry",numberOfPublishedBooks:27,numberOfPublishedChapters:287,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2632-0983",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.72877",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"25",title:"Environmental Sciences",numberOfPublishedBooks:1,numberOfPublishedChapters:9,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2754-6713",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100362",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"10",title:"Physiology",numberOfPublishedBooks:11,numberOfPublishedChapters:139,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-8261",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.72796",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],hsSeriesList:[{id:"3",title:"Dentistry",numberOfPublishedBooks:8,numberOfPublishedChapters:129,numberOfOpenTopics:0,numberOfUpcomingTopics:2,issn:"2631-6218",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71199",isOpenForSubmission:!1},{id:"6",title:"Infectious Diseases",numberOfPublishedBooks:13,numberOfPublishedChapters:107,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:1,issn:"2631-6188",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71852",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"13",title:"Veterinary Medicine and Science",numberOfPublishedBooks:10,numberOfPublishedChapters:103,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2632-0517",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.73681",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],sshSeriesList:[{id:"22",title:"Business, Management and Economics",numberOfPublishedBooks:1,numberOfPublishedChapters:12,numberOfOpenTopics:2,numberOfUpcomingTopics:1,issn:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100359",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"23",title:"Education and Human Development",numberOfPublishedBooks:0,numberOfPublishedChapters:0,numberOfOpenTopics:2,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100360",isOpenForSubmission:!1},{id:"24",title:"Sustainable Development",numberOfPublishedBooks:0,numberOfPublishedChapters:10,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:1,issn:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100361",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],testimonialsList:[{id:"13",text:"The collaboration with and support of the technical staff of IntechOpen is fantastic. The whole process of submitting an article and editing of the submitted article goes extremely smooth and fast, the number of reads and downloads of chapters is high, and the contributions are also frequently cited.",author:{id:"55578",name:"Antonio",surname:"Jurado-Navas",institutionString:null,profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRisIQAS/Profile_Picture_1626166543950",slug:"antonio-jurado-navas",institution:{id:"720",name:"University of Malaga",country:{id:null,name:"Spain"}}}},{id:"6",text:"It is great to work with the IntechOpen to produce a worthwhile collection of research that also becomes a great educational resource and guide for future research endeavors.",author:{id:"259298",name:"Edward",surname:"Narayan",institutionString:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/259298/images/system/259298.jpeg",slug:"edward-narayan",institution:{id:"3",name:"University of Queensland",country:{id:null,name:"Australia"}}}}]},series:{item:{id:"7",title:"Biomedical Engineering",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71985",issn:"2631-5343",scope:"Biomedical Engineering is one of the fastest-growing interdisciplinary branches of science and industry. The combination of electronics and computer science with biology and medicine has improved patient diagnosis, reduced rehabilitation time, and helped to facilitate a better quality of life. Nowadays, all medical imaging devices, medical instruments, or new laboratory techniques result from the cooperation of specialists in various fields. The series of Biomedical Engineering books covers such areas of knowledge as chemistry, physics, electronics, medicine, and biology. This series is intended for doctors, engineers, and scientists involved in biomedical engineering or those wanting to start working in this field.",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series/covers/7.jpg",latestPublicationDate:"May 13th, 2022",hasOnlineFirst:!0,numberOfPublishedBooks:12,editor:{id:"50150",title:"Prof.",name:"Robert",middleName:null,surname:"Koprowski",slug:"robert-koprowski",fullName:"Robert Koprowski",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002aYTYNQA4/Profile_Picture_1630478535317",biography:"Robert Koprowski, MD (1997), PhD (2003), Habilitation (2015), is an employee of the University of Silesia, Poland, Institute of Computer Science, Department of Biomedical Computer Systems. For 20 years, he has studied the analysis and processing of biomedical images, emphasizing the full automation of measurement for a large inter-individual variability of patients. Dr. Koprowski has authored more than a hundred research papers with dozens in impact factor (IF) journals and has authored or co-authored six books. Additionally, he is the author of several national and international patents in the field of biomedical devices and imaging. Since 2011, he has been a reviewer of grants and projects (including EU projects) in biomedical engineering.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Silesia",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Poland"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null},subseries:{paginationCount:3,paginationItems:[{id:"7",title:"Bioinformatics and Medical Informatics",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/7.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!0,editor:{id:"351533",title:"Dr.",name:"Slawomir",middleName:null,surname:"Wilczynski",slug:"slawomir-wilczynski",fullName:"Slawomir Wilczynski",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y000035U1loQAC/Profile_Picture_1630074514792",biography:"Professor Sławomir Wilczyński, Head of the Chair of Department of Basic Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Medical University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland. His research interests are focused on modern imaging methods used in medicine and pharmacy, including in particular hyperspectral imaging, dynamic thermovision analysis, high-resolution ultrasound, as well as other techniques such as EPR, NMR and hemispheric directional reflectance. Author of over 100 scientific works, patents and industrial designs. Expert of the Polish National Center for Research and Development, Member of the Investment Committee in the Bridge Alfa NCBiR program, expert of the Polish Ministry of Funds and Regional Policy, Polish Medical Research Agency. Editor-in-chief of the journal in the field of aesthetic medicine and dermatology - Aesthetica.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Medical University of Silesia",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Poland"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null},{id:"8",title:"Bioinspired Technology and Biomechanics",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/8.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!0,editor:{id:"144937",title:"Prof.",name:"Adriano",middleName:"De Oliveira",surname:"Andrade",slug:"adriano-andrade",fullName:"Adriano Andrade",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRC8QQAW/Profile_Picture_1625219101815",biography:"Dr. Adriano de Oliveira Andrade graduated in Electrical Engineering at the Federal University of Goiás (Brazil) in 1997. He received his MSc and PhD in Biomedical Engineering respectively from the Federal University of Uberlândia (UFU, Brazil) in 2000 and from the University of Reading (UK) in 2005. He completed a one-year Post-Doctoral Fellowship awarded by the DFAIT (Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada) at the Institute of Biomedical Engineering of the University of New Brunswick (Canada) in 2010. Currently, he is Professor in the Faculty of Electrical Engineering (UFU). He has authored and co-authored more than 200 peer-reviewed publications in Biomedical Engineering. He has been a researcher of The National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq-Brazil) since 2009. He has served as an ad-hoc consultant for CNPq, CAPES (Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel), FINEP (Brazilian Innovation Agency), and other funding bodies on several occasions. He was the Secretary of the Brazilian Society of Biomedical Engineering (SBEB) from 2015 to 2016, President of SBEB (2017-2018) and Vice-President of SBEB (2019-2020). He was the head of the undergraduate program in Biomedical Engineering of the Federal University of Uberlândia (2015 - June/2019) and the head of the Centre for Innovation and Technology Assessment in Health (NIATS/UFU) since 2010. He is the head of the Postgraduate Program in Biomedical Engineering (UFU, July/2019 - to date). He was the secretary of the Parkinson's Disease Association of Uberlândia (2018-2019). Dr. Andrade's primary area of research is focused towards getting information from the neuromuscular system to understand its strategies of organization, adaptation and controlling in the context of motor neuron diseases. His research interests include Biomedical Signal Processing and Modelling, Assistive Technology, Rehabilitation Engineering, Neuroengineering and Parkinson's Disease.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Federal University of Uberlândia",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Brazil"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null},{id:"9",title:"Biotechnology - Biosensors, Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/9.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!0,editor:{id:"126286",title:"Dr.",name:"Luis",middleName:"Jesús",surname:"Villarreal-Gómez",slug:"luis-villarreal-gomez",fullName:"Luis Villarreal-Gómez",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/126286/images/system/126286.jpg",biography:"Dr. Luis Villarreal is a research professor from the Facultad de Ciencias de la Ingeniería y Tecnología, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, Tijuana, Baja California, México. Dr. Villarreal is the editor in chief and founder of the Revista de Ciencias Tecnológicas (RECIT) (https://recit.uabc.mx/) and is a member of several editorial and reviewer boards for numerous international journals. He has published more than thirty international papers and reviewed more than ninety-two manuscripts. His research interests include biomaterials, nanomaterials, bioengineering, biosensors, drug delivery systems, and tissue engineering.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Autonomous University of Baja California",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Mexico"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null}]},overviewPageOFChapters:{paginationCount:17,paginationItems:[{id:"81751",title:"NanoBioSensors: From Electrochemical Sensors Improvement to Theranostic Applications",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.102552",signatures:"Anielle C.A. Silva, Eliete A. Alvin, Lais S. de Jesus, Caio C.L. de França, Marílya P.G. da Silva, Samaysa L. Lins, Diógenes Meneses, Marcela R. Lemes, Rhanoica O. 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