Abstract: | Transduction of Pseudomonas aeruginosa plasmid Rms149 by the generalized transducing bacteriophage phi DS1 was shown to occur during a 9-day incubation of environmental test chambers in a freshwater reservoir. Plasmid DNA was transferred from a nonlysogenic plasmid donor to a phi DS1 lysogen of P. aeruginosa that served both as the source of the transducing phage and as the recipient of the plasmid DNA. When the concentration of donors introduced into the chambers was varied while the recipient concentration in each chamber was at a level equivalent to natural concentrations of P. aeruginosa, the concentration of plasmid-containing donor cells introduced was shown to affect the frequency of transduction significantly. Transduction was observed both in the absence and in the presence of the natural microbial community. The presence of the natural community resulted in a rapid decrease in the numbers of the introduced donors and recipients and a decrease in the number of transductants recovered. These results demonstrate the potential for naturally occurring transduction in aquatic environments and indicate that donor load may be an important parameter in assessing this potential. |