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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Competitive elimination of Enterobacteriaceae from seawater.

H W Jannasch
- 01 Oct 1968 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 10, pp 1616-1618
TLDR
A chemostat inoculated with a mixed population will select for that organism that exhibits the fastest growth rate under the specific conditions (composition of medium, temperature, etc.), and competitive processes were studied in detail.
Abstract
organisms of nonmarine origin in seawater is basically affected by the mere competition for growth-limiting nutrients, primarily carbon and energy sources (1). During recent studies on the growth kinetics of various marine isolates, data were obtained on the basis of which the role of growth competition, as compared to more specific inhibitory effects, could be evaluated and defined. A chemostat inoculated with a mixed population will select for that organism that exhibits the fastest growth rate under the specific conditions (composition of medium, temperature, etc.). These competitive processes were studied in detail (4) with sterile supplemented seawater as a medium and raw seawater as an inoculum. A number of bacterial strains belonging to different genera were enriched by varying the dilution rate or the concentration of the growth limiting substrate in the reservoir, or both. In these experiments, 0.1 to 10 mg/liter of lactate, glycerol, or glucose were added to filter-sterilized offshore seawater; ammonium and phosphate were added in sufficient concentrations to ascertain growth limitation by the carbon and energy source. Samples taken from the chemostat twice a retention time were streaked on agar that was prepared with the same medium but contained 100 mg/liter of the respective carbon source. Enrichments to at least 90% of

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Citations
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Taxonomy of Aerobic Marine Eubacteria

TL;DR: Two hundred and eighteen strains of nonfermentative marine bacteria were submitted to an extensive morphological, physiological, and nutritional characterization, finding that the majority of these groups were separable by a large number of unrelated phenotypic traits.
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Survival of enteric bacteria in seawater

TL;DR: Using Escherichia coli as a model, a surprisingly small number of genes was found that, when mutated, significantly affect seawater sensitivity of this bacterium.
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A case for bacterial dormancy in aquatic systems

TL;DR: The hypothesis outlined in this communica t ion is controversial and disagreement is welcomed since in the words of Eugene Odum, "d i s a g r e e m e n t is certain to generate useful knowledge but (also) to p romote the art and science of both the exper imental and analytical app roaches".
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Solar and Temporal Effects on Escherichia coli Concentration at a Lake Michigan Swimming Beach

TL;DR: It is suggested that solar inactivation is an important mechanism for natural reduction of indicator bacteria in large freshwater bodies and have implications for management strategies of nontidal waters and the use of E. coli as an indicator organism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competition for mixed substrates by microbial populations

TL;DR: A model for the growth of an organism on multiple substrates was developed, assuming that each substrate has a competitive inhibition effect on the uptake of other substrates, and extended to examine mixed substrates showing that the coexistence of several species at steady state in continuous cultures is possible.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Continuous Culture of Bacteria; a Theoretical and Experimental Study

TL;DR: It is concluded that continuous culture may usually be expected to show a five to tenfold increase in output as compared with a batch process.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of factors affecting the survival of Escherichia coli in sea water. II. Salinity, pH, and nutrients.

TL;DR: A consideration of the accuracy of dilution data obtained by using several dilutions, and the effect of concentration of dyes on differentiation of enteric bacteria on eosin-methylene blue agar.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enrichments of aquatic bacteria in continuous culture

TL;DR: Experimental attempts to separate single species from mixed cultures of known composition showed that successful or unsuccessful competition for the limiting substrate is based upon the particular growth parameters of the individual species under the given culture conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lysis of Escherichia coli by marine micro-organisms.

TL;DR: The role of the native microflora in the disappearance of E. coli from seawater is defined and the negative effect of heat sterilization of seawater on its specific bactericidal action indicates a biological interaction which has been neither confirmed nor disproved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerated death of aerobacter aerogenes starved in the presence of growth-limiting substrates.

J. R. Postgate, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1964 - 
TL;DR: Substrate-accelerated death (Postgate & Hunter, 1963a) was observed with glycerol-, glucose-, ribose-, ammonium- or phosphate-limited populations of Aerobacter aerogenes grown in defined media and starved in non-nutrient buffer; sulphate- or magnesium-limited organisms did not show this.
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