A collection of 17 cyanophage isolates able to Infect the heterocystous, filamentous cyanobacterium Nodularia spumigena has been established from the Baltic Sea. These cyanophages have been characterized based on their morphology, cross infectivity and genetic structure. Shorts Fragments (450 bp) or the gene encoding the major capsid protein (g23) were amplified and sequenced From several isolates, and the encoded protein was found to he 99% identical across all the X spumigena-specific cyanophages tested. These results suggest that the Nodularia-specific cyanophages are very closely related. However, these cyanophages were found to be diverse in terms of their morphology and host range. Cyanophages belonging to two families within the order Caudovirales, Myoviridae and Siphoviridae, were included ill the collection of isolates. The cyanophage particles are large in comparison with cyanophages previously isolated from the marine environment, with the largest capsid measuring 127x122x888 nm. Host ranges of the cyanophage isolates varied, some being able to infect to five genotypically distinct strains of Nodularia spumigena, while others were wry specific, infecting only one strain. We conclude that Nodularia-specific cyanophages form a diverse community in surface waters during summer and autumn months and that they may play a role both in the transfer of genetic information between Nodularia lineages and in promoting changes in the genetic structure of the host population.