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Microbes and the Environment

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Title: Microbes and the Environment


1
Microbes and the Environment
2
Microbial Ecology
Definition the study of the behavior and
activities of microorganisms in their natural
environment
3
Environments
  • Two scales
  • ________________ environment
  • ________________ environment

4
Example Termite Hindgut
anoxic
5
Example Termite Hindgut
Model system (1) symbiosis microbe and
relationship with host (2) ecology relationship
with other microbes and the environment
6
Mutualism
  • some reciprocal benefit to both partners
  • an ________________ relationship
  • often partners cannot live separately
  • mutualist and host are metabolically dependent on
    each other
  • termite provides food for protozoan
  • protozoan digests cellulose in wood particles,
    providing nutrients for termite

7
Example Termite Hindgut
8
Foundations of Microbial Ecology
  • ________________
  • relationships among organisms in an ecosystem
  • populations
  • assemblages of similar organisms
  • communities
  • mixtures of different populations
  • ecosystems
  • self-regulating biological communities and their
    physical environment

9
Another example lichens
  • mycobiont
  • fungal partner
  • provides water, minerals, sheltered environment
    and firm substratum for growth
  • phycobiont________________
  • alga or cyanobacterium
  • provides organic carbon and oxygen

10
Roles of microbes
  • primary producers
  • decomposers (often carry out mineralization)
  • food source for other organisms
  • biogeochemical cycling
  • change amounts of materials in soluble and
    gaseous form
  • produce inhibitory compounds that limit microbial
    activity or limit survival and functioning of
    plants and animals
  • impact function of plants and animals through
    symbiotic interactions

11
Microorganism Movement between Ecosystems
  • movement occurs in many ways
  • in soil transported by windstorms
  • in rivers containing eroded materials, sewage
    plant effluents and urban wastes
  • by plants and animals
  • waste products
  • dead organisms
  • intentional or accidental transport by human
    activity

12
Fate of transported microbes
  • usually do not survive well in new environment
  • often unable to compete effectively with
    indigenous organisms
  • nonculturable microorganisms
  • alive, but unable to be cultured using techniques
    normally used for that microbe

13
Cycles in the Environment
Water Elements (carbon, nitrogen, sulfur etc)
14
Hydrologic Cycle
15
Carbon Cycle
CH4
16
Carbon Chemistry
  • Carbon Fixation
  • Convert CO2 to organic matter (example
    photosynthesis)
  • Mineralization
  • Convert organic matter to inorganic counterparts
    (CO2, CH4 etc..)

17
Microbes and Agriculture
  • The Nitrogen Cycle

18
Sulfur Cycle
19
Winogradsky Column
demonstrates gradients often observed in aquatic
environ- ments and under- lying sediments
20
Cycles in the Environment
Water Elements (carbon, nitrogen, sulfur etc)
Metals Iron, Manganese
21
Acid Mine Drainage
Sulfide oxidation by oxygen to sulfate (initiator
reaction)
4FeS2(pyrite) 14O2 4H2O  ---gt  4Fe2 8SO42-
8H Fe2 ---gt   Fe3 FeS2(pyrite) 14Fe3
8H2O   ---gt   15Fe2 2SO42- 16H   
Sulfide oxidation by Thiobacillus ferrooxidans
(propagation cycle)
22
Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum
23
Microorganisms and Metal Toxicity
  • microorganisms can modify toxicity of metals
  • differing sensitivities of multicellular
    organisms and microorganisms to metals are basis
    of many antiseptic procedures

24
Lets consider some environemnts
25
Marine Environments
  • contain 97 of Earths water
  • often called high pressure refrigerator
  • temperatures near 3C
  • pressures up to 1,000 atm

26
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27
Nutrient cycling
  • most occurs in upper 300 meters
  • organic matter falls
  • only 1 of photosynthetically derived materials
    reach deep-sea floor unaltered
  • conditions in deep sea are oligotrophic

28
Sea ice environments
  • interfaces between ice an sea water
  • pockets of salt brine

29
Freshwater Environments
  • lakes, rivers and streams
  • provide microbial environments that are very
    different from marine environments

30
Lakes
oligotrophic
31
eutrophic nutrient rich
epilimnion warm, aerobic
hypolimnion cold, anaerobic
thermocline zone of rapid temperature decrease
  • usually little mixing of layers
  • in spring and fall layers turn over and mixing
    occurs

32
Microorganisms in Freshwater Ice
  • e.g., Antarctic lakes
  • important habitats for microorganisms
  • microbial growth occurs during summer when some
    of ice melts

33
Waters and Disease Transmission
  • numerous diseases are waterborne

34
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35
Waterborne Pathogens and Water Purification
  • water purification
  • critical link in controlling waterborne disease

36
sedimentation basin
settling basins
37
Problem microbes
  • not consistently removed by coagulation, rapid
    sand filtration, and disinfection processes
  • Giardia lamblia
  • backpackers disease
  • slow sand filters effectively remove Giardia
    cysts
  • Cryptosporidium
  • small protozoan, with oocysts that escape usual
    purification schemes
  • Cyclosporan
  • protozoan that causes diarrhea
  • viruses
  • up to 99.9 are removed by usual purification
    schemes, but this not considered sufficient
    protection

38
Sanitary Analysis of Waters
  • based on detecting ________________
  • indicate fecal contamination of water supplies
  • indicate possible contamination by human pathogens

39
Ideal indicator organism
  • suitable for analysis of all types of water
  • present whenever enteric pathogens are present
  • survives longer than hardiest enteric pathogen
  • does not reproduce in contaminated water
  • detected by highly specific test
  • test easy to do and sensitive
  • harmless to humans
  • its level in water reflects degree of fecal
    pollution

40
Two commonly used indicators
  • coliforms
  • fecal streptococci
  • increasingly used to test brackish and marine
    water

41
Coliforms
  • facultative anaerobic, ________________,
    nonsporing, rod-shaped bacteria that ferment
    lactose with gas formation within 48 hours at 35C

42
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43
MPN most probable number
Figure 29.22
44
Wastewater Treatment
  • decreases organic matter and number of
    microorganisms in human waste-impacted water
  • has lead to major reduction in spread of pathogens

45
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46
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47
Eutrophication
  • Process whereby water bodies receive excess
    nutrients that stimulate excessive algal growth
    called an algal bloom
  • results from addition of nutrients to water
  • e.g., addition of phosphorus to oligotrophic
    water can stimulate cyanobacterial and algal
    growth
  • e.g., addition of nutrients to eutrophied lakes
    can cause blooms
  • stimulates growth of plants, algae, and bacteria
  • can occur slowly (over centuries) or very rapidly
  • This reduces dissolved oxygen in the water (when
    dead plant material decomposes)

48
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49
Oxygen Sag Curve
50
back to some environments
51
Soil as an Environment for Microorganisms
  • dominated by inorganic geological material, which
    is modified by organisms to form soils
  • typically not water saturated, so O2 readily
    available
  • can contain mini aquatic environments

52
Microorganisms in the Soil Environment
peds aggregated soil particles
53
Microbial populations in soils
  • numbers can be very high
  • only small portion have been cultured
  • microbes are constantly being added to soil
  • most do not survive
  • make important contributions to biogeochemical
    cycling
  • gram-positive bacteria are important members of
    soil communities

54
Deserts Soils
  • desert crusts
  • microbial communities on soil surface
  • cyanobacteria and associated commensals
  • help retain water from infrequent rainfalls
  • are fragile and easily damaged

55
Mycorrhizae
  • fungus-root associations
  • can increase plants competitiveness
  • e.g., increase availability of nutrients
  • e.g., aid in water uptake
  • can influence plant communities
  • sharing of nutrients
  • mycorrhizosphere
  • region around mycorrhizal fungi having increased
    microbial populations due to release of materials
    by fungus

56
Agrobacterium
  • induce tumor formation in plants
  • controlled by Ti (Ri) plasmid
  • used by biotechnologists to modify plant DNA

57
Fungi and Bacteria as Plant Pathogens
  • fungal pathogens cause diseases called rusts,
    powdery mildews, and smuts
  • bacterial pathogens also cause a variety of plant
    diseases

58
Viruses
  • wide range of viruses infect plants
  • e.g., tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)
  • one virus of note infects fungus that causes
    chestnut blight
  • may be used to control fungal pathogen

59
Understanding Microbial Diversity in the Soil
  • estimated that only 1-10 of microscopically
    observable microbes have been cultured
  • molecular techniques are allowing microbiologists
    to detect and identify noncultured microbes

60
Methods in Microbial Ecology
  • microscopy
  • chemical and biochemical analyses
  • culturing techniques
  • many microorganisms cannot be cultured
  • molecular techniques
  • hybridization
  • PCR
  • microarrays
  • arrays of gene probes that allow detection of
    ssRNA from mixed populations
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