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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Oct 1996, 3716-3721, Vol 62, No. 10
JG Mitchell, L Pearson and S Dillon
Seawater enrichments of marine bacteria clustered in 20- to 50-(mu)m-wide
bands near air-water interfaces. The cells within the band travelled at up
to 212 (mu)m s(sup-1) and at an average speed of 163 (mu)m s(sup-1). Mean
cell speeds peaked mid-run at 187 (mu)m s(sup-1). At the end of the run,
bacteria reversed direction rather than randomly reorienting. The duration
of the stops during reversal was estimated at 18 ms, six to seven times
shorter than that found in enteric bacteria. Cells hundreds of micrometers
from the band travelled at half the speed of the bacteria in the band. The
fastest isolate from the seawater enrichment was identified as Shewanella
putrefaciens and had an average speed of 100 (mu)m s(sup-1) in culture.
Air-water interfaces produced no clustering or speed changes in isolates
derived from enrichments. Salinity and pH, however, both influenced speed.
The speed and reversal times of the seawater enrichments indicate that the
bacteria in them are better adapted for clustering around small point
sources of nutrients than are either enteric or cultured marine bacteria.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Clustering of Marine Bacteria in Seawater Enrichments
Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia
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