Abstract
A study was conducted to determine the role of inoculum size of a bacterium introduced into nonsterile lake water in the biodegradation of a synthetic chemical. The test species was a strain of Pseudomonas cepacia able to grow on and mineralize 10 ng to 30 micrograms of p-nitrophenol (PNP) per ml in salts solution. When introduced into water from Beebe Lake at densities of 330 cells per ml, P. cepacia did not mineralize 1.0 microgram of PNP per ml. However, PNP was mineralized in lake water inoculated with 3.3 X 10(4) to 3.6 X 10(5) P. cepacia cells per ml. In lake water containing 1.0 microgram of PNP per ml, a P. cepacia population of 230 or 120 cells per ml declined until no cells were detectable at 13 h, but when the initial density was 4.3 X 10(4) cells per ml, sufficient survivors remained after the initial decline to multiply at the expense of PNP. The decline in bacterial abundance coincided with multiplication of protozoa. Cycloheximide and nystatin killed the protozoa and allowed the bacterium to multiply and mineralize 1.0 microgram of PNP, even when the initial P. cepacia density was 230 or 360 cells per ml. The lake water contained few lytic bacteria. The addition of KH2PO4 or NH4NO3 permitted biodegradation of PNP at low cell densities of P. cepacia. We suggest that a species able to degrade a synthetic chemical in culture may fail to bring about the same transformation in natural waters, because small populations added as inocula may be eliminated by protozoan grazing or may fail to survive because of nutrient deficiencies.
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