• Title of article

    Starved bacteria retain their size but lose culturability – Lessons from a 5000 years old undisturbed A-horizon

  • Author/Authors

    Vestergهrd، نويسنده , , Mette and Ekelund، نويسنده , , Flemming and Winding، نويسنده , , Anne-Marie Jacobsen، نويسنده , , Carsten Suhr and Christensen، نويسنده , , Sّren، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    4
  • From page
    1379
  • To page
    1382
  • Abstract
    The vast majority of soil bacteria are unable to form visible colonies on agar media. One hypothesis is that unculturable soil bacteria are dwarf cells that may either be small starved forms derived from larger species or represent inherently small species. We test the hypotheses that cells of extremely starved soil bacterial communities are smaller and less culturable than cells of bacterial communities from a richer soil, and that culturability is related to cell size by comparing an extremely starved community from a 5200-year-old A-horizon buried under a burial mound with a community from a modern agricultural A-horizon. ially filtered cell suspensions through filters with successively smaller pore sizes (0.8 μm, 0.6 μm and 0.4 μm) and assessed total cell number and culturability, i.e. the ability to form colonies on two types of agar media, in each size fraction. Cell size distributions were assessed in unfiltered suspensions. Average cell size was only moderately reduced in the starved community, where culturability was low for all size classes. In contrast, culturability was much higher in the modern community, where culturability decreased dramatically with decreasing cell sizes.
  • Keywords
    CFU , Cell diameter , Cell viability , Culturability , Palaeosoil , starvation , AODC , Bacteria , Size filtration
  • Journal title
    Soil Biology and Biochemistry
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Soil Biology and Biochemistry
  • Record number

    2185159