Although antibiotic production may contribute significantly to microbial fitness, there is limited information on the ecology of antibiotic-producing microbial populations in soil. Indeed, quantitative information on the variation in frequency and intensity of specific antibiotic inhibitory and resistance abilities within soil microbial communities is lacking. Among the streptomycetes, antibiotic production is highly variable and resistance to antibiotics is highly specific to individual microbial strains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
February 2004
Antibiotic interactions are believed to be significant to microbial fitness in soil, yet little is known of the frequency, intensity, and diversity of antibiotic inhibition and resistance among indigenous microbes. To begin to address these issues, we studied the abilities of streptomycete isolates from prairie soil to inhibit growth and display resistance to antibiotics produced by a test collection of 10 streptomycete isolates. Wide variations in antibiotic inhibition and resistance for prairie isolates among three locations and four soil depths within a 1-m2 plot were revealed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe spatial scale of genetic diversity among patches of a host plant could affect the likelihood of pathogen adaptation to the host. If host patches are genetically distinct, pathogen adaptation to local host genotypes may occur. To study this issue, we focused on the ecological and genetic interactions between two rust fungi, Puccinia seymouriana and P.
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