Topic 12 - Environmental microbiology Flashcards

1
Q

What is biotic and abiotic?

A

living and non-living.

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2
Q

What is biosphere?

A

It includes all ecosystems such as:
atmosphere which is the air. this is difficult for microbes as it lacks nutrients/moisture/surfaces and is mainly for the dispersal of spores.
lithosphere which is soil or earth’s crust
hydrosphere which is water - marina/fresh

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3
Q

What are extremophiles?

A

Microbes which live in extreme environments which includes extreme pH’s, temperature and salinity.

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4
Q

What are examples of extreme habitats?

A

Salt lakes which have bacterohodospin and high temperatures in very deep oceans with high pressures

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5
Q

What is symbiosis?

A

When two different organisms live together in close association which is beneficial to one or both of them.

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6
Q

What are examples of symbiosis?

A

Ruminants - have bacteria in their rumen which enables the animal to digest cellulose.
Mycorrhizae - have a close association with fungi and plants as they contribute to plant growth

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7
Q

What is mycorrhizae?

A

Fungi that lives in plant roots in a mutualism relationship as that plants extend the surface area via hyphae roots and the fungi receives carbohydrates from the plant. This drastically increases the plant growth.

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8
Q

What is biogeochemical cycles?

A

It is the recycling of chemical elements (via oxidation and reduction) between biotic and abiotic environment.

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9
Q

What is soil microbiology?

A

mineral particles - 51% (clay, silt, sand and gravel)
organic matter - 9% (plant and animal derived)
pore space - 40% (water and air)
living organisms - 1%

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10
Q

What is the mature soil profile?

A

O horizon - layer of undecomposed plant materials
A horizon - surface soil which is high in organic matter and where plants and microbes grow
B horizon - minerals, humus from soil accumulate here, there is little living matter, microbial activity lower than A horizon
C horizon is the soil base which develops directly underneath bedrock and microbial activity is very low

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11
Q

What is a rhizosphere?

A

The microecological zone in direct proximity of plant roots.

The distance between them is either on or within 5mm of the root to allow for microbial growth.

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12
Q

What are examples of bacteria which inhabit soil?

A

Chemoheterotrophic - Pseudomonas, Arthrobacter, Streptomyces and bacillus.
Chemoautotrophic - nitrobacter, thiobacillus

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13
Q

What is environmental microbiology?

A

The study of microbe interactions in their natural habitats

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14
Q

What causes the sweet earthy smell after rain?

A

Stretomyces as it releases a compound called geosmin which can be detected by the human nose.

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15
Q

List the fungi properties for soil inhabitation.

A
  • fungi has the ability to better tolerate desiccation than bacteria
  • carbon recyclers/decomposers (saprophytes)
  • predominant genera: Mucor, Pencillium, Aspergillus
  • seen as moulds and yeasts in soil
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16
Q

Cyanobacteria properties in soil

A
  • blue geen algae/bacteria
  • important for carbon cycling (photosynthetic)
  • widely found in soil and water
  • can fix nitrogen (seen in rice paddies)
  • heterocytes are specialised nitrogen fixing cells with low oxygen to protect nitrogenase enzyme
  • cynanobacteria can be environmentally harzardous, toxic blooms in water (Microcytis aeruginosa has toxins which can kill people and animals).
17
Q

Apart from free soil at the very surface where would you find high levels of organic matter and bacteria in soil?

A

Rhizosphere

18
Q

How would the nutrition and respiration of microbes change with depth in soil?

A

There is more anaerobic bacteria; sulphur (sulphate reducing bacteria) and methanogens (archae) with increasing depth.

19
Q

What are the different methodologies when it comes to growing and studying soil?

A
  • Isolation and identification
  • Enumeration (counting)
  • Metagenomic (sequence of DNA, which is cheap but difficult to interpret)
  • Biological activity
  • Cultivation (only 10% of soil species is cultivable)
20
Q

What are isolation techniques?

A
  • Selective media which discourages the growth of unwanted products by adding inhibitory compounds, e.g. addition of streptomycin and rose bengal allows for fungal growth but inhibits bacterial growth
  • Enrichment media which is an addition of a substrate which encourages growth of organism in interest, e.g. adding cellulose as the sole carbon source which allows for microbes which can break down cellulose to grow while others cant
21
Q

What are examples of isolation medias?

A

MacConkey’s agar which is selective for enteric bacteria due to bile salts
Enrichment broth which is a liquid medium which greatly increases small numbers

22
Q

What biogeochemical cycle is much publicised as contributing to global warming?

A

The carbon cycle - greenhouse gases

23
Q

Main source of carbon in cellulose forming mass of a forest?

A

0.04% CO2 in atmosphere

24
Q

Why is lightening important in the nitrogen cycle?

A

The high energy breaks down N2 which reacts with oxygen (nitrous oxide) and becomes dissolved in rain as nitrates = fixed nitrogen.
Accounts for 5-7% of earth total nitrogen fixation per year. nd

25
Q

Outline the nitrogen cycle.

A

Living organisms have 10 - 15% N
Global turn over os 10^9 to 10^10 tonnes per year
Cycling is mainly through chemical reactiosns
N2 is the most stable form of nitrogen

26
Q

What is soil nitrogen compose of?

A
  • Amino acids (20-50%)
  • Amino sugars (5 -10%)
  • Purine and pyrimidine bases (1%)
  • Inorganic nitrogen (2%)
27
Q

What is ammonification?

A
  • also called mineralisation
  • deamination of AA’s which releases ammonia gas (NH3)
  • NH3 solidifies in water presence = NH4+ (ammonium) in dry soil NH3 is lost in the atmosphere
  • extracellular enzymes of fungi and bacteria
  • ammonium is used up by other microbes or oxidised to NO3
28
Q

What is nitrification?

A

it is the biological oxidation of ammonia to nitrate which are preferentially assimilated by plants.
- ammonium is chemically stable under acidic conditions and not easily leached out of soil and it may be toxic to plants over a certain level.
There are 2 steps depending on the different groups:
nitrosomonas
2NH4+ + 3O2 —–> 2NO2 + 4H+ + 2H2O
Nitrobacter
2NO2 + O2 —-> 2NO3

29
Q

What is denitrification?

A

biological reduction of nitrate or nitrite to nitrogen or nitrous oxide
NO3 —> NO2- —> N2O —> N2
it leads to decrease of oil fertility
occurs at pH 5, high temp and anaerobic conditions (water logged soils)
caused by pseudomonas, bacillus and achromobacter

30
Q

What is nitrogen fixation?

A

This is seen in symbiotic relationships, in root nodules.
Rhizobium - gram negative rods found in peas, alfalfa, beans, lucerene and glover.
Bradyrhizobium - gram negative rods which are in soy beans and lupins.
Franka- actinomycete which is in alder trees and casuarina\