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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2001, p. 1116-1122, Vol. 67, No. 3
Department of Horticulture and Crop Sciences,
Agricultural University of Norway, N-1432 Ås,
Norway,1 and Department of Microbial
Ecology, Lund University, SE-223 62 Lund, Sweden2
Received 7 August 2000/Accepted 7 December 2000
The temperature-driven adaptation of the bacterial community in
peat was studied, by altering temperature to simulate self-heating and
a subsequent return to mesophilic conditions. The technique used
consisted of extracting the bacterial community from peat using
homogenization-centrifugation and measuring the rates of thymidine
(TdR) or leucine (Leu) incorporation by the extracted bacterial
community at different temperatures. Increasing the peat incubation
temperature from 25°C to 35, 45, or 55°C resulted in a selection of
bacterial communities whose optimum temperatures for activity
correlated to the peat incubation temperatures. Although TdR and Leu
incorporations were significantly correlated, the Leu/TdR incorporation
ratios were affected by temperature. Higher Leu/TdR incorporation
ratios were found at higher temperatures of incubation of the extracted
bacterial community. Higher Leu/TdR incorporation ratios were also
found for bacteria in peat samples incubated at higher temperatures.
The reappearance of the mesophilic community and disappearance of the
thermophilic community when the incubation temperature of the peat was
shifted down were monitored by measuring TdR incorporation at 55°C
(thermophilic activity) and 25°C (mesophilic activity). Shifting the
peat incubation temperature from 55 to 25°C resulted in a recovery of
the mesophilic activity, with a subsequent disappearance of the
thermophilic activity. The availability of substrate for bacterial
growth varied over time and among different peat samples. To avoid
confounding effects of substrate availability, a temperature adaptation
index was calculated. This index consisted of the log10
ratio of TdR incorporation at 55 and 25°C. The temperature index
decreased linearly with time, indicating that no thermophilic activity
would be detected by the TdR technique 1 month after the temperature
downshift. There were no differences between the slopes of the
temperature adaptation indices over time for peat samples incubated at
55°C 3 or 11 days before incubation at 25°C. Thus, different levels of bacterial activity did not affect the temperature-driven adaptation of the bacterial community.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.3.1116-1122.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Temperature-Driven Adaptation of the Bacterial
Community in Peat Measured by Using Thymidine and Leucine
Incorporation
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Horticulture and Crop Sciences, Agricultural University of Norway, P.O. Box 5022, N-1432 Ås, Norway. Phone: (47) 64 94 78 74. Fax:
(47) 64 94 78 02. E-mail:
sissel.ranneklev{at}ipf.nlh.no.
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