Affiliation:
1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Western Fish Toxicology Station, Corvallis, Oregon 97330
2. Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
Abstract
Growth, survival, and pathogenicity of
Klebsiella
growing in and on environmental foci were examined. Total coliforms present in raw wastes from pulp mills were in excess of 10
5
/ml, and 60 to 80% were
Klebsiella
. Fecal coliform counts ranged from 10
1
to 10
5
/ml.
Klebsiella
isolates from industrial effluents and a variety of human and bovine mastitis origins multiplied in pulp waste and commonly exceeded 10
6
cells per ml. Pathogenic isolates also multiplied in dilute aqueous extracts of sawdust to comparable levels.
Klebsiella
strains from vegetable surfaces and human infections grew rapidly on the surfaces of potatoes and lettuce and exceeded 10
3
organisms per g of surface peel and leaf after a 24h incubation at room temperature. After 7 weeks on potatoes stored at 5°C, some 10 to 30% of the day 1
Klebsiella
counts were recoverable. Three
Klebsiella
isolates of pathogenic origin were passed 45 times through sterile pulp effluent (270 generations), and mean lethal dose levels in mice were periodically monitored. In two instances, a significant decrease in virulence was noted after 15 to 26 passes (90 to 156 generations). The third culture, of bovine mastitis origin, retained its original mean lethal dose value. Botanical milieu provided suitable habitats for the multiplication and colonization of
Klebsiella
isolates of disease origins in the same manner as indigenous isolates. Aquatic environments polluted with botanical material served as potential reservoirs for perpetuating the growth and spread of opportunistic
Klebsiella
pathogens that may ultimately colonize animals, humans, and aquatic organisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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