Five strains of sulfate-reducing bacteria were isolated from the highest positive dilutions of a most probable number (MPN) series supplemented with lactate and inoculated with sediments from the oligotrophic Lake Stechlin. The isolates were endospore-forming and were motile by means of laterally inserted flagella. They stained Gram-negative and contained b-type cytochromes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSamples from 27 natural and artificial aquatic environments were analyzed for the presence of rosette-forming bacteria by a combined cultivation and molecular biological approach. Rosette-forming bacteria developed in 20 enrichment cultures with ammonia-free medium under air. Three morphotypes could be distinguished.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAchromatium is a genus of large unicellular sulfur bacteria. Despite being first described in the late 19th century, no Achromatium spp. have yet been isolated in culture, and for over 100 years, knowledge of their ecology, physiology and relationships to other bacteria has been scant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to find a simple and efficient method to determine sulphate reduction rates in environmental samples, we tested different 35S-SO(4)(2-) radiotracer techniques. The methods varied in the application of 35S-SO(4)(2-) and subsequent extraction of reduced 35S-sulphur species. Samples were either incubated as sediment slurries mixed with the radiotracer, or as undisturbed sediment cores after core injection of the radiotracer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA Gram-negative, anaerobic sulfate-reducing bacterium was isolated from hindgut contents of the lower termite Mastotermes darwiniensis Froggatt (strain KMS2). Strain KMS2 is motile by a single polar flagellum. The isolate possesses desulfoviridin and catalase activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAchromatium oxaliferum was first described in 1893 by Schewiakoff as an unusually large bacterium living in freshwater sediments. Up to now no pure culture is available. Physical enrichments of achromatia collected from the acidic Lake Fuchskuhle, which houses a peculiar, smaller variety, and the neutral Lake Stechlin were investigated by the cultivation-independent rRNA approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe community structure of sulfate-reducing bacteria in littoral and profundal sediments of the oligotrophic Lake Stechlin (Germany) was investigated. A collection of 32 strains was isolated from the highest positive dilutions of most-probable-number series, and their partial 16S rRNA gene sequences and genomic fingerprints based on ERIC (enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus)-PCR were analyzed. The strains fell into eight distinct phylogenetic lineages, and the majority (70%) showed a close affiliation to the genus Desulfovibrio.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe most abundant culturable sulfate-reducing bacteria were isolated from the littoral sediment of the oligotrophic Lake Stechlin. The strains STL1 and STL4 were obtained from the oxic uppermost layer, while strain STL6 was isolated from the anoxic zone in 20 to 30 mm depth. The isolates showed a striking morphological feature in tapering off at one end of the cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn enrichment of the neuston bacterium Nevskia ramosa was investigated by the cultivation-independent rRNA approach. N. ramosa was first described by Famintzin in 1892 as a rod-shaped, slightly bent bacterium forming typical flat rosettes on the surface of shallow freshwater habitats by unilateral slime formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
May 1998
During the last 100 years, the neuston bacterium Nevskia ramosa has been described several times. This bacterium forms conspicuous rosette-like microcolonies at the air-water interface. In this study, pure cultures of Nevskia ramosa were obtained for the first time, from a bog lake (strain Soe1, DSMZ 11499T) and a freshwater ditch (strain OL1, DSMZ 11500).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZentralbl Bakteriol Naturwiss
December 1980
A diffusion cell type which is suitable for investigation of water-insoluble compounds is shown. The chamber consists of two compartments, the so-called bottom-chamber, which contains the solid substance under investigation, and the main chamber, which is above it. In this chamber only the dissolved part of the substance is present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDibenzylsulfid (DBS) as a model of the organic sulfur compounds in crude oil was converted by a mixed culture (containing Pseudomonas aeruginosa) into several water soluble organic substances. Whereas these compounds are detectable with DC- and IR-spectroscopic techniques, benzylmercaptoacetic acid (BMA) was the only isolated product of DBS utilization. Efficiency of degradation, respectively, accumulation of BMA were dependent on aeration and pH-regulation.
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