Richard Bartha

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Richard Bartha is a microbiologist born in Hungary. He is best known professionally for his seminal discoveries in the field of bacterial pollution control ("bioremediation"). Dr. Bartha and graduate students Ronald Atlas and Michael Pirnik were the first to discover that bacteria are capable of metabolizing petroleum, paving the way for the use of "oil-eating bacteria" to clean up oil spills. Dr. Bartha also made important discoveries regarding the abilities of bacteria to degrade other pollutants, such as pesticides, polyaromatic hydrocarbons, chlorinated organic compounds, and metals.

Dr. Bartha spent his childhood in Budapest, where he attended University. During his college years he participated in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, in which Hungarians took up arms against their communist government and against the occupying forces of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics ("USSR"). When the uprising was quashed by Soviet forces, Dr. Bartha escaped to the Federal Republic of Germany (then known as "West Germany"), where he undertook his doctoral studies. After earning his Ph.D., Dr. Bartha came to the United States of America, and eventually earned a tenured professiorship at Rutgers University in the Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology.

Dr. Bartha is co-author of the most widely used text on the subject of microbial ecology (written with Ronald Atlas). He pioneered many methods in the field of bioremediation.

Dr. Bartha is currently retired, a naturalized citizen of the United States of America. His professional reputation is matched by his warm and congenial manner with colleagues.

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