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1.
One hundred and fifteen clonal, unialgal strains were isolated and tested for their ability to grow over a range of temperatures from 2 to 40° C. Responses of 63 strains isolated from habitats that were 6° C when sampled and 52 strains isolated from habitats that were 20° C when sampled showed trends toward increasing adaptation to cold or warm temperatures commensurate with their seasonal in situ temperatures. Based on temperature-growth responses alone, 24% of the plankton isolates and 17% of the periphyton isolates could be perennial within the natural habitats. At 5° C, 56% of the warm water plankton isolates and 48% of the warm water periphyton isolates were incapable of growth and, therefore, probably could not be important components of the winter algal community. Likewise at 25° C, 25% of the cold water plankton isolates and 13% of the cold water periphyton isolates were incapable of growth. Thus, temperature alone probably is an important variable regulating seasonal changes in algal community structure. Pollution of these habitats by a thermal enrichment averaging + 5° C year-round could effect a pronounced change in algal species composition because many more taxa could be perennial and more taxa would be incapable of growth during naturally warm periods.  相似文献   

2.
Oscillatorian cyanobacteria dominate benthic microbial mat communities in many polar freshwater ecosystems. Capable of growth at low temperatures, all benthic polar oscillatorians characterized to date are psychrotolerant (growth optima > 15° C) as opposed to psychrophilic (growth optima ≤ 15° C). Here, psychrophilic oscillatorians isolated from meltwater ponds on Antarctica's McMurdo Ice Shelf are described. Growth and photosynthetic rates were investigated at multiple temperatures, and compared with those of a psychrotolerant isolate from the same region. Two isolates showed a growth maximum at 8° C, with rates of 0.12 and 0.08 doublings·d ? 1, respectively. Neither displayed detectable growth at 24° C. The psychrotolerant isolate showed almost imperceptible growth at 4° C and a rate of 0.9 doublings·d ? 1 at its optimal temperature of ~23° C. In both photosynthesis versus irradiance and photosynthesis versus temperature experiments, exponentially growing cultures were acclimated for 14 days at 3, 8, 12, 20, and 24° C under saturating light intensity, and [14C] photoincorporation rates were measured. Psychrophilic isolates acclimated at 8° C showed greatest photosynthetic rates; those acclimated at 3° C were capable of active photosynthesis, but photoincorporation was not detected in cells acclimated at 20 and 24° C, because these isolates were not viable after 14 days at those temperatures. The psychrotolerant isolate, conversely, displayed maximum photosynthetic rates at 24° C, though photoincorporation was actively occurring at 3° C. Within acclimation temperature treatments, short‐term photosynthetic rates increased with increasing incubation temperature for both psychrophilic and psychrotolerant isolates. These results indicate the importance of temperature acclimation before assays when determining optimal physiological temperatures. All isolates displayed photosynthetic saturation at low light levels (<128 μmol·m ? 2·s ? 1) but were not photoinhibited at the highest light treatment (233 μmol·m ? 2·s ? 1). Field studies examining the impact of temperature on photosynthetic responses of intact benthic mats, under natural solar irradiance, showed the mat communities to be actively photosynthesizing from 2 to 20° C, with maximum photoincorporation at 20° C, as well as capable of a rapid response to an increase in temperature. The rarity of psychrophilic cyanobacteria, relative to psychrotolerant strains, may be due to their extremely slow growth rates and inability to take advantage of occasional excursions to higher temperatures. We suggest an evolutionary scenario in which psychrophilic strains, or their most recent common ancestor, lost the ability to grow at higher temperatures while maintaining a broad tolerance for fluctuations in other physical and chemical parameters that define shallow meltwater Antarctic ecosystems.  相似文献   

3.
We characterized the culturable, heterotrophic bacterial community in soil collected from a former alpine military site contaminated with petroleum hydrocarbons. The physiologically active eubacterial community, as revealed by fluorescence-in situ-hybridization, accounted for 14.9 % of the total (DAPI-stained) bacterial community. 4.0 and 1.2 % of the DAPI-stained cells could be attributed to culturable, heterotrophic bacteria able to grow at 20 and 10 °C, respectively. The majority of culturable bacterial isolates (23/28 strains) belonged to the Proteobacteria with a predominance of Alphaproteobacteria. The remaining isolates were affiliated with the Firmicutes, Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes. Five strains could be identified as representatives of novel species. Characterization of the 28 strains demonstrated their adaptation to the temperature and nutrient conditions prevailing in the studied soil. One-third of the strains was able to grow at subzero temperatures (?5 °C). Studies on the effect of temperature on growth and lipase production with two selected strains demonstrated their low-temperature adaptation.  相似文献   

4.
《Aquatic Botany》1986,24(2):185-197
The physiological responses to temperature were investigated in two coexisting seagrasses, Zostera marina L. and Ruppia maritima L. sensu lato from the lower Chesapeake Bay, Virginia. Seven plant collections were made from March to July, 1983 at ambient temperatures of 8–30°C. Both species maintained relatively constant fresh: dry weight ratios and chlorophyll a:b ratios over the five-month period. Total chlorophyll content remained constant in Z. marina while that of R. maritima doubled from March to July. Pmax values for both species increased with increasing temperature and declined at temperatures above 19 and 23°C (Z. marina and R. maritima, respectively). Pmax values were significantly higher for R. maritima compared to Z. marina at temperatures above 19°C. Both short-term (laboratory) and long-term (in situ) responses to temperature regimes affected estimates of the photosynthetic capacity of both species. Thus, temperature histories of experimental material should be carefully considered when interpreting temperature effects on photosynthesis. This study provides support of the hypothesis that seasonal community dynamics of Z. marina and R. maritima in Chesapeake Bay are regulated in part by different responses to light and temperature.  相似文献   

5.
During spring and autumn, the total number of amoebae and the number of Acanthamoeba species able to grow at 37°C were determined in six thermally polluted factory discharges and the surrounding surface waters. The isolated Acanthamoeba strains were studied for growth in axenic medium, cytopathic effect in Vero cell cultures, and virulence in mice. Although more amoebae were isolated in autumn, the number of Acanthamoeba species was lower than in spring, when the percent of pathogenic strains among the isolates was highest. Higher concentrations of amoebae were found in warm discharges, and more virulent strains occurred in thermal discharges than in surface waters.  相似文献   

6.
The relationship between distribution boundaries and temperature responses of some North AtlanticCladophora species (Chlorophyta) was experimentally examined under various regimes of temperature, light and daylength. Experimentally determined critical temperature intervals, in which survival, growth or reproduction was limited, were compared with annual temperature regimes (monthly means and extremes) at sites inside and outside distribution boundaries. The species tested belonged to two phytogeographic groups: (1) the tropical West Atlantic group (C. submarina: isolate from Curaçao) and (2) the amphiatlantic tropical to warm temperate group (C. prolifera: isolate from Corsica;C. coelothrix: isolates from Brittany and Curaçao; andC. laetevirens: isolates from deep and shallow water in Corsica and from Brittany). In accordance with distribution from tropical to warm temperate regions, each of the species grew well between 20–30°C and reproduction and growth were limited at and below 15°C. The upper survival limit in long days was <35°C in all species but high or maximum growth rates occurred at 30°C.C. prolifera, restricted to the tropical margins, had the most limited survival at 35°C. Experimental evidence suggests thatC. submarina is restricted to the Caribbean and excluded from the more northerly American mainland and Gulf of Mexico coasts by sporadic low winter temperatures in the nearshore waters, when cold northerly weather penetrates far south every few years. Experimental evidence suggests thatC. prolifera, C. coelothrix andC. laetevirens are restricted to their northern European boundaries by summer temperatures too low for sufficient growth and/or reproduction. Their progressively more northerly located boundaries were accounted for by differences in growth rates over the critical 10–15°C interval.C. prolifera andC. coelothrix are excluded or restricted in distribution on North Sea coasts by lethal winter temperatures, again differences in cold tolerance accounting for differences in their distribution patterns. On the American coast, species were probably restricted by lethal winter temperatures in the nearshore and, in some cases, by the absence of suitable hard substrates in the more equable offshore waters. Isolates from two points along the European coast (Brittany, Corsica) ofC. laetevirens showed no marked differences in their temperature tolerance but the Caribbean and European isolates ofC. coelothrix differed markedly in their tolerance to low temperatures, the lethal limit of the Caribbean isolate lying more than 5°C higher (at ca 5°C).  相似文献   

7.
Rising temperatures (1.4–6 °C) due to climate change have been predicted to increase cyanobacterial bloom occurrences in temperate water bodies; however, the impacts of warming on tropical cyanobacterial blooms are unknown. We examined the effects of four different temperatures on the growth rates and microcystin (MC) production of five tropical Microcystis isolates (M. ichthyoblabe (two strains), M. viridis, M. flos-aquae, and M. aeruginosa). The temperature treatments are based on current temperature range in Singapore's reservoirs (27 °C and 30 °C), as well as projected mean (33 °C) and maximum temperatures (36 °C) based on tropical climate change estimates of +6 °C in air temperature. Increasing temperatures did not significantly affect the maximum growth rates of most Microcystis strains. Higher growth rates were only observed in one M. ichthyoblabe strain at 33 °C and M. flos-aquae at 30 °C where both were isolated from the same reservoir. MC-RR and MC-LR were produced in varying amounts by all four species of Microcystis. Raised temperatures of 33 °C were found to boost total MC cell quota for three Microcystis strains although further increase to 36 °C led to a sharp decrease in total MC cell quota for all five Microcystis strains. Increasing temperature also led to higher MC-LR:MC-RR cell quota ratios in M. ichthyoblabe. Our study suggests that higher mean water temperatures resulting from climate change will generally not influence growth rates of Microcystis spp. in Singapore except for increases in M. ichthyoblabe strains. However, toxin cell quota may increase under moderate warming scenarios depending on the species.  相似文献   

8.
McLachlan  J.  Bird  C. J. 《Helgoland Marine Research》1984,38(3-4):319-334
Tolerance and growth at temperatures from 0° to 36°C were investigated using 15 species and strains ofGracilaria Grev. isolated from tropical and temperate coasts of the Atlantic and eastern Pacific Oceans. All survived a minimum of 15°C and, with two exceptions, a maximum of 28°C. Only two species tolerated 34°C and none 36°C which was rapidly lethal. Isolates intolerant of temperatures less than 15°C were generally species known only from tropical waters, whereas species isolated from temperate waters tended to be eurythermal, and most seemed not to be restricted to cooler waters. Maximum growth of warm-water isolates tended to occur over a broad range of warmer temperatures, 20°C and higher, and usually extended to the upper limits of thermal tolerance. Isolates from temperate waters showed maximum growth at 20° or 15°C, and there was no appreciable growth of any of the isolates below 10°C. These experimental results are in accord with known distributional patterns ofGracilaria. There is a correlation between temperature and number of species, with most species reported from warm-water areas where the mean water temperature is 25°C or more. Where the 3-month mean minimum temperature is less than 20°C, there is a rapid decline in number of species. In the eastern Atlantic, the relationship is less obvious as few species have been reported from the warm-water region. This is quite likely the result of other environmental factors.NRCC No. 23817Paper presented at the Seaweed Biogeography Workshop of the International Working Group on Seaweed Biogeography, held from 3–7 April 1984 at the Department of Marine Biology, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (The Netherlands). Convenor: C. van den Hoek.  相似文献   

9.
Thirty-five taxa (128 clonal cultures) of Antarctic algae isolated from various habitats were assayed for growth over a range of 2–34°C. Isolates, all unialgal and two axenic, varied markedly in their temperature-growth responses. Only four taxa belonging to either the Chlamydomonadaceae or Ulotrichaceae were obligately cold-adapted and incapable of growth at ≥20°C. All isolates grew at temperatures ranging from 7.5 to 18°C, and a few were incapable of growth at ≤5°C. Over one-third of the isolates grew at 30°C, but none grew at 34°C. Percentages of cold-adapted clones correlated well with the more stable low temperature habitats. Four chlamydomonad isolates displayed optimum temperatures for growth near their maximum temperatures for growth, both temperatures being well above those of the native habitats. This temperature-growth response suggests a closer relationship to algae from more moderate thermal regions than one might have supposed. However, the ability to grow at low temperatures and the inability to grow at 34°C suggest that these Antarctic algae are cold temperature adapted. Growth capability at low in situ temperatures is considered more useful ecologically than physiologically-defined categories for algae based on their maximum temperature for growth.  相似文献   

10.
We measured the growth rates and swimming behaviors of recently isolated strains of the dinoflagellate Akashiwo sanguinea to investigate to what degree growth and motility could contribute to the formation of in situ blooms. To quantify the effect of variation in in situ conditions on population growth rate, we applied two temperature treatments (10 °C and 20 °C) and measured growth in still conditions and on a shaker table, to emulate mild turbulence. To quantify the importance of intra-strain variability and trait variation in the species growth potential and vertical distribution, we included six strains isolated from a spatially and temporally extensive bloom on the US West Coast. Overall, as reported previously, A. sanguinea was observed to tolerate conditions amounting to a broad ecological niche with intra-specific variability further broadening tolerable conditions. In agreement with prior observations of slow growth rates of the species, average growth rates across all strains increased significantly from 0.12 d−1 (±0.03) at 10 °C to 0.28 d−1 (±0.13) at 20 °C in still conditions. Contrary to prior reports, mild turbulence had neutral or positive effects on most strains’ growth rates, with one strain only able to grow on the shaker table. Growth rates in mild turbulence were higher than in still conditions and increased from 0.15 d−1 (±0.01) at 10 °C to 0.43 d−1 (± 0.04) at 20 °C. There was significant intra-strain variation in growth rates (>50% coefficient of variation) and movement behaviors. All strains had both up and down swimming fractions, leading to predictions of vertically patchy distributions, rather than surface aggregations. Slow growth rates and dispersive swimming behaviors suggest in situ mortality must be low and tolerance of seasonally varying water temperatures lead to accumulation and persistence of cells over months and kilometers. Estimates of in situ loss rates are a critical but missing component of identifying the bloom formation mechanisms of this species.  相似文献   

11.
Laboratory, growth chamber and field experiments were conducted to select among 226 isolates of Rhizobium meliloti for the ability to grow, nodulate alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and support N2-dependent plant growth between 9° and 12°C. There was wide variation in the abilities of R. meliloti isolates to grow and form nodules at 10°C. Culture doubling times (td) varied from 1 to 155h, and the number of nodules formed on alfalfa in growth pouches in 2 weeks varied from 0 to 3.8 nodules per plant. Nodulation occurred at 9°C, but there was no significant N2-dependent plant growth at this temperature. However, several isolates of R. meliloti had the ability to nodulate alfalfa and produce N2-dependent growth at root temperatures between 10° and 12°C root temperature than did 14 other isolates tested. In field experiments, inoculation with strain NRG-34 resulted in greater nodule numbers, nodule weight, proportion of nodules occupied by the inoculant strain and plant weight than did inoculation with a commercial strain (NRG-185). These results permitted selection of a strain with better low-temperature competitive abilities than the currently available commercial strains.  相似文献   

12.
Two different psychrophilic types of the heterotrophic nanoflagellate Paraphysomonas imperforata were isolated from Newfoundland coastal waters and the Arctic Ocean. When fed bacteria without food limitation, both isolates were able to grow at temperatures from -1.8 to 20°C, with maximum growth rates of 3.28 day-1 at 15°C and 2.28 day-1 at 12.3°C for the Newfoundland and the Arctic isolates, respectively. Ingestion rates increased with temperature from 14 to 62 bacteria flagellate-1 h-1 for the Newfoundland isolate and from 30 to 99 bacteria flagellate-1 h-1 for the Arctic isolate. While temperature did not affect cell yields (number of protozoa produced divided by number of bacteria consumed), it affected flagellate sizes. This differential effect of temperature on cell yield and cell size resulted in a changing gross growth efficiency (GGE) in terms of biovolume; colder temperatures favored higher GGEs. The comparison of Q10 values for growth rates and ingestion rates between the isolates shows that the Arctic isolate is better adapted to extremely cold temperature than the Newfoundland isolate. At seawater-freezing temperature (-1.8°C), the estimated maximum growth rates and maximum ingestion rates are 0.81 day-1 and 30 bacteria flagellate-1 h-1 for the Arctic isolate and 0.54 day-1 and 12 bacteria flagellate-1 h-1 for the Newfoundland isolate. Our findings about psychrophilic nanoflagellates fit the general characteristics of cold-water-dwelling organisms: reduced physiological rates and higher GGEs at lower temperatures. Because of the large and persistent differences between the isolates, we conclude that they are ecotypes adapted to specific environmental conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Ten strains of non-sulfur purple photosynthetic bacteria were isolated from soil and water samples gathered in Bangkok and its surrounding area. The isolated strains from Thailand were divided into two groups, Al to A4 and BI to B6. They were identified as Rhodopseudomonas gelatinosa and Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, respectively. All strains grew well either at 30°C or 40°C, but failed to grow at 45°C. Strains belonging to group A had weak activities of nitrogenase (acetylene reduction) and hydrogen production, while strains of group B showed much higher activities than group A. The activities of nitrogenase and hydrogen production of isolates in Thailand were compared with those of isolates in Japan. The activities of isolated strains in Thailand at 40°C were almost equal to those at 30°C or even higher. On the other hand, both hydrogen production and the nitrogenase activity of isolates in Japan decreased significantly at 40°C as compared to the activities at 30°C. These results suggest an intrinsic thermostability in hydrogen production by the non-sulfur purple photosynthetic bacteria of Thailand. Among isolated strains in Thailand, strain B5 was the most active in nitrogenase and hydrogen production, and its activity was significantly higher than strain TN3 at 40°C. TN3 had been selected as the most active strain among isolates in the Sendai area.  相似文献   

14.
Two clones ofAlexandrium cohorticula were isolated at Aburatsubo, Sagami Bay, Japan. Cultured cells of both contained high amounts of paralytic shellfish toxins. The toxicity of these isolates was comparable with that of highly toxic Thai clones. No significant difference in toxin components or their proportions was observed between Japanese and Thai strains. The optimum growth temperature of both strains was around 25 °C. Japanese strains survived at 15 °C, whereas Thai strains did not; the latter grew faster than the former at 30 °C.  相似文献   

15.
Ostreopsis ovata is a benthic dinoflagellate that produces palytoxin and ovatoxins. Blooms of O. ovata causing human health problems and mortality of benthic fauna have been reported from many tropical and temperate marine waters. In the present study we examined the combined effects of temperature and different nutrient conditions on the biochemical composition, growth, toxicity and carbohydrate production of an O. ovata strain originating from the Tyrrhenian Sea. O. ovata cultures with N:P ratios of 1.6, 16 and 160 (N deficient, NP sufficient and P deficient, respectively) were grown at 20 °C and 30 °C. Biomass accumulation, growth rates, cell volumes, biochemical composition, cell toxicity and carbohydrate production in each treatment were studied. Results indicated that under nutrient sufficiency O. ovata biomass accumulation increased significantly compared to N and P deficiency and also that N limitation severely affected growth. The highest growth rates were recorded at 30 °C. Cellular contents and the atomic ratios of C, N and P were higher in the cells grown at 20 °C than in those grown at 30 °C. O. ovata cell volumes increased at 20 °C. N deficiency significantly increased cell toxicity. Toxicity per cell was higher at 20 °C, but per carbon was highest at 30 °C. The highest carbohydrate production was found in conditions of N deficiency and at the lower temperature.Our study suggests that temperature increases due to global warming and nutrient enrichment of coastal waters stimulate the proliferation of O. ovata, particularly for the strains that have become adapted to warm temperate waters.  相似文献   

16.
Isolates ofFusarium poae, F. sporotrichioides, F. sporotrichioides var.chlamydosporum andF. sporotrichioides var.tricinctum made their best growth on PDA substrates at 24 °C, but good growth was also made at 18 °C and 30 °C. At 35 °C growth made by theF. sporotrichioides var.chlamydosporum was quite good, and superior to that of the other fungi. Moderate growth was made by all fungi at 12 °C and byF. sporotrichioides var.tricinctum also at 6 °C, while growth of the other fungi at that temperature was slight. At low temperatures toxic isolates of all butF. sporotrichioides grew better than non-toxic isolates, and growth of all isolates usually was better in light than in darkness up to temperatures of 18 °C. F. poae andF. sporotrichioides produced highest toxicity on rabbit skins when grown at 5–8 °C,F. sporotrichioides var.tricinctum at 15–20 °C. Darkness always favoured toxin development at all temperatures. In a comparison of 3 liquid substrates, overall toxin production was stronger on a starch substrate than on Czapek's or carbohydrate-peptone substrates. Among grain substrates, barley gave highest overall toxicity, which was again favoured by darkness.F. poae isolates were most toxic when derived from soil,F. sporotrichioides isolates when derived from barley. Further tests with 8 liquid substrates confirmed thatF. poae andF. sporotrichioides produce stronger toxicity at 8 °C than at 25 °C, and substrates favoured toxin production at pH 5.6 more than at pH 3.8 or 7.2. At pH 5.6 the isolates induced marked changes in the pH level of the substrate on which they grew. No relation was found to exist between the vigour of growth made by any of these fungi under various environmental conditions and the severity of the toxiç reaction their extracts produced on rabbit skins.  相似文献   

17.
Yu Fukasawa 《Mycoscience》2018,59(3):259-262
Hyphal growth rates were tested on malt extract agar plates at eight different temperatures (5–40?°C) using 36 isolates of 17 basidiomycete species obtained from Pinus densiflora deadwood in Japan. All isolates of four brown rot species showed optimum growth at 30?°C, whereas the optimum growth temperature of white rot species varied from 20?°C to 30?°C. Analysis using a dataset from four cooler sites showed that brown rot fungi grew more rapidly than white rot fungi at higher temperatures (25?°C, 30?°C, and 35?°C). These results suggest that the hyphal growth of brown rot fungi might be physiologically adapted to higher temperatures than those of white rot fungi among the fungal species inhabiting deadwood of P. densiflora in Japan.  相似文献   

18.
The purposes of this study were to evaluate the phosphate solubilization activity of bacteria isolated from the rhizosphere of rice paddy soil in northern Iran, and to study the effect of temperature, NaCl and pH on the growth of these isolates by modeling. Three of the most effective strains from a total of 300 isolates were identified and a phylogenetic analysis was carried out by 16S rDNA sequencing. The isolates were identified as Pantoea ananatis (M36), Rahnella aquatilis (M100) and Enterobacter sp. (M183). These isolates showed multiple plant growth-promoting attributes such as phosphate solubilization activity and indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) production. The M36, M100 and M183 isolates were able to solubilize 172, 263 and 254 µg ml?1 of Ca3(PO4)2 after 5 days of growth at 28 °C and pH 7.5, and to produce 8.0, 2.0 and 3.0 μg ml?1 of IAA when supplemented with l-tryptophan (1 mg ml?1) for 72 h, at 28 °C and pH 7.0, respectively. The solubilization of insoluble phosphate was associated with a drop in the pH of the culture medium and there was an inverse relationship between pH and solubilized P (r = ?0.98, P < 0.0952). There were no significant differences among isolates in terms of acidity tolerance based on their confidence limits as assessed by segmented model analysis and all isolates were able to grow at pH 4.3–11 (with optimum at 7.0–7.5). Based on a sigmoidal trend of a three-parameter logistic model, the salt concentration required for 50 % inhibition was 8.15, 6.30 and 8.23 % NaCl for M36, M100 and M183 isolates, respectively. Moreover, the minimum and maximum growth temperatures estimated by the segmented model were 5.0 and 42.75 °C for M36, 12.76 and 40.32 °C for M100, and 10.63 and 43.66 °C for M183. The three selected isolates could be deployed as inoculants to promote plant growth in an agricultural environment.  相似文献   

19.
Forty-nine strains of filamentous, mat-forming cyanobacteria isolated from the Arctic, subarctic and Antarctic environments were screened for their potential use in outdoor waste-water treatment systems designed for cold north-temperate climates. The most promising isolate (strain E18, Phormidium sp. from a high Arctic lake) grew well at low temperatures and formed aggregates (flocs) that could be readily harvested by sedimentation. We evaluated the growth and nutrient uptake abilities of E18 relative to a community of green algae (a Chlorococcalean assemblage, denoted Vc) sampled from a tertiary treatment system in Valcartier, Canada. E18 had superior growth rates below 15°C Canada. (μ = 0.20 d-1 at 10°C under continuous irradiance of 225 μmol photon m-2 s-1) and higher phosphate uptake rates below 10°C (k = 0.050 d-1 at 5°C) relative to Vc (μ=0.087 d-1 at 10°C and k = 0.020 d-1 at 5°C, respectively). The green algal assemblage generally performed better than E18 at high temperatures (at 25°C, μ = 0.39 d-1 and k = 0.34 d-1 for Vc; μ = 0.28 d-1 and k = 0.33 d-1 for E18). However, E18 removed nitrate more efficiently than Vc at most temperatures including 25°C. Polar cyanobacteria such as strain E18 are appropriate species for waste-water treatment in cold climates during spring and autumn. Under warmer summer conditions, fast-growing green algae such as the Vc assemblage are likely to colonize and dominate, but warm-water Phormidium isolates could be used at that time. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Control of Campylobacter in the food chain requires a better understanding of the behaviour of the bacteria in relevant environments. Campylobacter species are largely non-pathogenic in poultry, the body temperature of which is 42 °C. However, the bacteria are highly pathogenic in humans whose body temperature is 37 °C. The aim of this study was to examine if switching from commensal to pathogenic behaviour was related to temperature. We examined the growth, motility and invasion of T84 cells by three species of Campylobacter: C. jejuni 81116, C. jejuni M1, C. coli 1669, C. coli RM2228 and C. fetus fetus NC10842 grown at 37 and 42 °C. Our results suggest that C. jejuni isolates grow similarly at both temperatures but some are more motile at 42 °C and some are more invasive at 37 °C, which may account for its rapid spread in poultry flocks and for infection in humans, respectively. C. coli, which are infrequent causes of Campylobacter infections in humans, is less able to grow and move at 37 °C compared to 42 °C but was significantly more invasive at the lower temperature. C. fetus fetus, which is infrequently found in poultry, is less able to grow and invade at 42 °C.  相似文献   

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