Abstract

The time course for the development of motility in cultures of the cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus was established quantitatively using a slicer tool as described here. The slicer tool produces samples of trichomes from centrifuged pellets that, under identical conditions, shed comparable numbers of hormogonia. The number of hormogonia formed in liquid culture rises steeply between 24 and 31 h of incubation, returning to essentially zero in the next 24 h. The initial lag may be devoted to the cell divisions needed to form the cells of the hormogonium. The drop in motility could be due to one or more heat-stable substance(s) accumulated in the medium, since used media inhibited motility and the effect resisted autoclaving. The fact that the inoculum needed to be ground in order for motility to occur suggests that the structure of the clump inhibits the shedding of hormogonia. Some ecological implications are proposed, assuming that the clump structure interferes with light and mass transfer.

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