Microbial life at extremely low nutrient levels |
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Authors: | P Hirsch |
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Institution: | Institut für Allgemeine Mikrobiologie, University of Kiel, Olshausenstr. 40, D-2300, Kiel, F.R.G. |
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Abstract: | Many microorganisms (“oligotrophs”) grow in distilled water:
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spp.,
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,
spp.,
(
)
,
spp., yeasts, and
spp. Also, certain lower fungi can be found here. In the laboratory, these organisms thrive on contaminations of the air (CO, hydrocarbons, H2, alcohols etc.). All are euryosmotic and often grow also in higher concentrations of salts and nutrients. Natural locations with extremely low nutrient levels (snow, rain water pools, springs, free ocean water, Antarctic rocks and soils) do not contain more than 1–5 mg/1 of organic carbon. Oligotrophs found here are especially adapted to constant famine: they frequently live attached to surfaces, form polymers and storage products even while starving, and often aggregate. Many of these oligotrophs alter their morphology (surface to volume ratio) with changing nutrient concentrations. Extreme oligotrophs also occur in generally nutrient-rich environments such as sewage aeration tanks or compost soil. Here they are thought to survive in nutrient-depauperate microhabitats. |
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