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8: Microbial Growth

  • Page ID
    75851
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    • 8.1: How Microbes Grow
      The bacterial cell cycle involves the formation of new cells through the replication of DNA and partitioning of cellular components into two daughter cells. In prokaryotes, reproduction is always asexual, although extensive genetic recombination in the form of horizontal gene transfer takes place, as will be explored in a different chapter. Most bacteria have a single circular chromosome; however, some exceptions exist.
    • 8.2: Oxygen Requirements for Microbial Growth
      Ask most people “What are the major requirements for life?” and the answers are likely to include water and oxygen. Few would argue about the need for water, but what about oxygen? Can there be life without oxygen? The answer is that molecular oxygen is not always needed. The earliest signs of life are dated to a period when conditions on earth were highly reducing and free oxygen gas was essentially nonexistent.
    • 8.3: The Effects of pH and Temperature on Microbial Growth
      Bacteria are generally neutrophiles. They grow best at neutral pH close to 7.0. Acidophiles grow optimally at a pH near 3.0. Alkaliphiles are organisms that grow optimally between a pH of 8 and 10.5. Extreme acidophiles and alkaliphiles grow slowly or not at all near neutral pH. Microorganisms grow best at their optimum growth pH. Growth occurs slowly or not at all below the minimum growth pH and above the maximum growth pH. Microorganisms thrive at a wide range of temperatures; they have coloni
    • 8.4: Other Environmental Conditions that Affect Growth
      Microorganisms interact with their environment along more dimensions than pH, temperature, and free oxygen levels, although these factors require significant adaptations. We also find microorganisms adapted to varying levels of salinity, barometric pressure, humidity, and light
    • 8.5: Microbial Relationships
      Microorganisms interact with other organisms in a variety of different ways. Prokaryotes particularly can be found everywhere on our planet, even in the most extreme environments. Additionally, prokaryotes are very flexible metabolically, so they are able to adjust their feeding to the available natural resources. Thus the study of relationships of microorganisms, especially prokaryotes, living in communities that interact among themselves and with larger organisms (hosts), such as humans, is im
    • 8.6: Exercises

    Thumbnail: Heavy rains cause runoff of fertilizers into Lake Erie, triggering extensive algal blooms, which can be observed along the shoreline. Notice the brown unplanted and green planted agricultural land on the shore. (credit: NASA)


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