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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Dec 1995, 4436-4440, Vol 61, No. 12
JG Mitchell, L Pearson, S Dillon and K Kantalis
Natural communities of marine bacteria, an isolate (FMB-Bf3) from one
marine community, and Escherichia coli were examined by video microscopy
for the magnitude and uniformity of their speed. Natural communities formed
tight microswarms that showed higher speeds (mean = 230 microns s-1) than
did E. coli (15 microns s-1) or FMB-Bf3 (mean = 62 microns s-1). Outside
the microswarms, the marine bacteria slowed to 45 microns s-1. Between
turns, in mid run, and while travelling in straight lines, the
natural-community bacteria accelerated up to 1,450 microns s-2 while the
cultured bacteria showed maximum accelerations of 70 and 166 microns s-2.
The frequency distribution of speed change for the marine bacteria was
skewed towards a few large negative accelerations and a range of positive
accelerations. The general pattern was one of relatively slow increases in
speed followed by abrupt declines. The results indicate that the mechanical
generation and energetic maintenance, as well as the environmental
function, of bacterial motility need reappraisal. We conclude that the
standard bacterial motility parameters of low and uniform speed, derived
from culture-based studies, are not necessarily applicable to marine
bacterial communities.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Natural assemblages of marine bacteria exhibiting high-speed motility and large accelerations
Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.
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