Long-term starvation survival of Yersinia ruckeri at different salinities studied by microscopical and flow cytometric methods

Author:

Thorsen B K1,Enger O1,Norland S1,Hoff K A1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology and Plant Physiology, University of Bergen, Norway.

Abstract

Cultures of three strains of the fish pathogenic bacterium Yersinia ruckeri survived starvation in unsupplemented water for at least 4 months. At salinities of 0 to 20/1000 there were no detectable changes in CFU during the first 3 days of starvation and only a small decrease during the following 4 months, whereas at 35/1000 salinity, the survival potential of the cultures was markedly reduced. These results suggest that Y. ruckeri may survive for long periods in freshwater and brackish environments after an outbreak of enteric redmouth disease. Survival was also examined by use of the direct viable count method, and we show that this method can be combined with flow cytometry for automatic counting of viable bacteria. By flow cytometry, it was shown that genome replication initiated before the onset of starvation was completed, during the initial phase of starvation, and that starved cells could contain up to six genomes per cell.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference37 articles.

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3. Austin B. and D. A. Austin (ed.). 1987. Yersinia ruckeri p. 207-224. In Bacterial fish pathogens: disease in farmed and wild fish. John Wiley and Sons New York.

4. Effects of nutrient deprivation on libno cholerae;Baker R. M.;Appl. Environ. Microbiol.,1983

5. Automatic determination of bacterioplankton biomass by image analysis;Bj P. K.;Appl. Environ. Microbiol.,1986

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