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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1982 November; 44(5): 1086-1095

Growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in tap water in relation to utilization of substrates at concentrations of a few micrograms per liter.

D van der Kooij, J P Oranje and W A Hijnen

ABSTRACT

Five Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains were tested for the utilization of 47 low-molecular-weight compounds as their sole sources of carbon and energy for growth at a concentration of 2.5 g/liter. Of these compounds, 31 to 35 were consumed. Growth experiments in tap water at 15 degrees C were carried out with one particular strain (P1525) isolated from drinking water. This strain was tested for the utilization of 30 compounds supplied at a concentration of 25 microgram of C per liter. The growth rate (number of generations per hour) of strain P1525 in this tap water was approximately 0.005 h-1, and with 10 compounds it was larger than 0.03 h-1. An average yield of 6.2 x 10(9) colony-forming units per mg of C was obtained from the maximum colony counts (colony-forming units per milliliter). The average yield and maximum colony count of strain P1525 grown in tap water supplied with a mixture of 45 compounds, each at a concentration of 1 microgram of C per liter, enabled us to calculate that 28 compounds were utilized. Growth rates of two P. aeruginosa strains (including P1525) in various types of water at 15 degrees C were half of those of a fluorescent pseudomonad. The concentrations of assimilable organic carbon calculated from maximum colony counts and average yield values amounted to 0.1 to 0.7% of the total organic carbon concentrations in five types of tap water. The assimilable organic carbon percentages were about 10 times larger in river water and in water after ozonation.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1982 November; 44(5): 1086-1095




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