Differentiation of the Vegetative and Sporogenous Phases of the Actinomycetes: 2. Factors affecting the Development of the Aerial Mycelium
- 1 January 1947
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Microbiology Society in Journal of General Microbiology
- Vol. 1 (1) , 45-52
- https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-1-1-45
Abstract
SUMMARY: When first isolated on soil extract agar, soil actinomycetes consistently produce aerial spores in surface colonies. They retain this property when maintained in sterile soil, or when grown on washed suspensions of common soil bacteria, living or dead, in a water agar medium. In soil, when the composition, moisture content and temperature are kept constant, the initial stimulus towards the production of aerial mycelium is free access of air: the quantity and nature, vegetative or sporogenous, of the inoculum, and, within a broad range, the pH of the soil are of minor importance. Once growth is established, the next most important factor stimulating sporulation in the soil is also physical, namely dehydration. In natural and sterilized soils of different origins, and in a ‘Synthetic’ soil containing 250 p.p.m. of nitrogen as nitrate, the modes of growth of different actinomycetes strains are similar, and generally uncharacteristic of their species.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differentiation of the Vegetative and Sporogenous Phases of the Actinomycetes: 1. The Lipid Nature of the Outer Wall of the Aerial MyceliumJournal of General Microbiology, 1947
- Note on the Production of Soluble Blue Pigment in Simple Media by Actinomyces coelicolorJournal of Bacteriology, 1946
- SOME INFLUENCES OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF HIGHER PLANTS UPON THE MICROORGANISMS IN THE SOILSoil Science, 1938
- SYNTHETIC SOIL AS A MEDIUM FOR THE STUDY OF CERTAIN MICROBIOLOGICAL PROCESSESSoil Science, 1937
- A STUDY OF TWENTY‐FOUR STRAINS OF ACTINOMYCES AND THEIR RELATION TO TYPES OF COMMON SCAB OF POTATOAnnals of Applied Biology, 1926