Microbiological Studies on the Decomposition of Chitin in Marine Environment-III
- 1 January 1963
- journal article
- Published by The Oceanographic Society of Japan in Journal of the Oceanographical Society of Japan
- Vol. 19 (3) , 143-151
- https://doi.org/10.5928/kaiyou1942.19.143
Abstract
Chitin decomposing experiments were designed at conditions as much as possible similar to the natural conditions prevailing in the sea. The rate of chitin decomposition varied little with the species of chitinoclastic bacteria isolated (5 type strains). The rate of decomposition obtained was about 30 mg-chitin/day/1010 bacteria. The decomposition of chitin strips that are found in the ocean, as ecdysis and corpse of plank-tonic crustaceans, was 27 mg/day/g-chitin. The activities of chitinoclastic bacteria, isolated from the surface of the sea at Aburatsubo Inlet, were affected by a hydrostatic pressure of 200 atm. A. pressure of 200 atm at 25°C inhibit the activities of the chitinoclastic bacteria, however, even a pressure of 600 atm does not kill the bacteria.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microbiological Studies on the Decomposition of Chitin in Marine Environment-IJournal of the Oceanographical Society of Japan, 1963
- Microbiological Studies on the Decomposition of Chitin in Marine Environment-IIJournal of the Oceanographical Society of Japan, 1963
- Thermal Changes Accompanying the Compression of Aqueous Solutions to Deep‐Sea Conditions1Limnology and Oceanography, 1959
- An Additional Note on the Decomposition of Sinking Remains of Plankton Organisms and its Relationship to Nutriment LiberationJournal of the Oceanographical Society of Japan, 1956
- The Rate of Liberation of Phosphate in Sea Water by the Breakdown of Plankton OrganismsJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1935