Abstract

A culture technique for eucaryotic and procaryotic soil algae involving the use of membrane filters superimposed on the surface of inorganic nutrient agar is described. Nostoc commune grew exponentially when cultured in this manner. No significant differences in biomass production or nitrogenase activity were detected among culture subsets within replicate experiments run under standard conditions. Estimates of daily growth rates (0.340), culture doubling time (48.9 h), and nitrogenase activity (14.54 nM C2H2 reduced µg−1 chl a h−1) were consistent with laboratory and field estimates reported for several planktonic species of Anabaena and strains of Nostoc commune isolated from diverse terrestrial habitats. Therefore, the filter-culture technique is an alternative which may be superior to traditional liquid culture methodology for studies involving certain soil procaryotic and eucaryotic algae.

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