Abstract

Slow-growing bacteria, isolated on nutrient-rich and nutrient-limited media, from Chesapeake Bay water and sediment samples, were examined for 119 biochemical, cultural, morphological, nutritional, and physiological characters. Those bacteria which grow on low nutrient media, termed oligotrophs, a total of 162 strains, were subjected to taxonomic analysis, as a preliminary step in determining their ecological significance. The data for all strains included in the study were examined by computer and the simple matching (S SM) and Jaccard (SJ) coefficients calculated. Clustering was achieved by the unweighted average-linkage method. From sorted similarity matrices and dendrograms, 148 strains, 90% of the total, were recovered in 24 phenetic groups defined at the 80 to 85% similarity level. Only 12 phena could be presumptively identified and these included representatives of Alcaligenes, Corynebacterium, Hyphomicrobium, Hyphomonas polymorpha, Listeria, Nocardia marina, Pedomicrobium, Planococcus citreus, Sphaerotilus, Streptothrix, and Streptomyces. Of the remaining organisms, 10% were unidentified sheathed bacteria. It is concluded that slow-growing bacteria are distributed throughout the estuarine environment and can account for a large proportion of the colonies observed on media after prolonged periods of incubation. The oligotrophic bacteria appear to predominate in areas where the concentration of available nutrients is low and are more characteristic of non-eutrophic aquatic systems.

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