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Bacteriophage prehistory: Is or is not Hankin, 1896, a phage reference?

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TLDR
One of the oldest: Hankin’s 1896 study of a bactericidal action associated with the waters of the Ganges and Jumna rivers in India is explored, suggesting that the antibacterial aspect of these river waters was able to retain full potency following “heating” for one-half hour in hermetically sealed tubes.
Abstract
We identified 30 actual or presumptive “bacteriophage” references dating between the years 1895 and 1917 and have further explored one of the oldest: Hankin’s 1896 study of a bactericidal action associated with the waters of the Ganges and Jumna rivers in India. As Hankin’s work took place approximately 20 years prior to the actual discovery of bacteriophages, no claims were made as to a possible phage nature of the phenomenon. Here we suggest that it may be imprudent to assume nevertheless that it represents an early observation of phage-mediated bactericidal activity. Our principal argument is that the antibacterial aspect of these river waters was able to retain full potency following “heating” for one-half hour in hermetically sealed tubes, where heating in “open” tubes resulted in loss of antibacterial activity. We also suggest that environmental phage counts would have had to have been unusually high—greater than 106/ml impacting a single host strain—to achieve the rates of bacterial loss that Hanki...

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Virioplankton: viruses in aquatic ecosystems

TL;DR: Novel applications of molecular genetic techniques have provided good evidence that viral infection can significantly influence the composition and diversity of aquatic microbial communities, supporting the hypothesis that viruses play a significant role in microbial food webs.
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Ecology of prokaryotic viruses

TL;DR: Virus-induced mortality of prokaryotes varies strongly on a temporal and spatial scale and shows that phages can be important predators of bacterioplankton, which can strongly influence microbial food web processes and biogeochemical cycles.
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Seasonal epidemics of cholera inversely correlate with the prevalence of environmental cholera phages.

TL;DR: The data support the conclusion that cholERA phages can influence cholera seasonality and may also play a role in emergence of new V. cholerae pandemic serogroups or clones.
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