scholarly journals A note on some physical conditions for cultivating Oxyrrhis marina

Author(s):  
M. R. Droop

This note concerns a series of experiments to determine the best conditions of salinity, temperature and pH for cultivating the euryhaline phagotrophic dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina Dujardin.The strain of Oxyrrhis employed was isolated from a brackish pool at Tvarminne, Finland (Droop, 1953a, b). The culture medium for the experiments contained soil extract and an artificial sea water, SW 1 (NaCl, MgCl26H2O, KCl, and CaSO42H2O in the proportions by weight 15:2.5:0.4:0.5), and for food a small quantity of the yeast Saccharomyces exiguus was administered daily from an agar culture with a wire loop.

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 84-91
Author(s):  
Adil Laaziz ◽  
Souad Qjidaa ◽  
Yousra El Hammoudi ◽  
Abdelouahed Hajjaji ◽  
Amina Bouseta

The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of three fungicides azoxystrobin (Ortiva), hexaconazole (Hexa) and pyrimethanil (Pyrus) for their ability to inhibit the radial growth and ochratoxin A (OTA) production by five ochratoxigenic strains of Aspergillus carbonarius and A. niger previously iso-lated from Moroccan grapes. Our results showed that, the addition of the fungicides to the Czapek Yeast Autolysate agar culture medium reduced the growth of the ochratoxigenic strains. Pyrimethanil caused total inhibition of spore germination and growth of the five strains, for all dose tested. Where-as hexaconazole totally inhibited the growth of 4 strains and gave growth for the MUCL 49227 strain (2.67 mm/day) at sublethal concentration. The reduction in radial growth was less marked for azoxystrobin, with growth rate varying between 0 and 6.37 mm/day depending on the strain and the azoxystrobin concentration. Analysis of variance showed that the effect of single factors (fungicides, concentration and strain) and their interactions on growth and OTA production were highly significant (P=0.000).These findings suggest that the use of tested fungicides have to potential for reduction in production of OTA.


Development ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 407-414
Author(s):  
R. Christy Armstrong ◽  
Joel J. Elias

Abnormalities of the ocular system which appear in organ culture in Waymouth's medium with freshly added glutamine (Armstrong & Elias, 1968) resemble those caused by transitory pteryolglutamic acid (PGA or folic acid) deficiency in vivo (Armstrong & Monie, 1966). The configurations of such malformations as lens herniations, retinal diverticula, and rosette-like formations of the retina are remarkably similar in both cases. The experiments reported in this paper were undertaken in an effort to understand the mechanisms involved in the production of similar abnormalities by two very different experimental conditions: the addition of glutamine in vitro and the transitory deficiency of PGA in vivo. One series of experiments involved the effects of manipulation of the PGA and glutamine content of the culture medium on eye development in vitro. Parallel studies on PGA-deficiency in vivo were undertaken in conjunction with organ-culture experiments in order to compare the effects on abnormal eye morphogenesis.


Author(s):  
T. Kondratiuk ◽  
T. Beregova ◽  
T. Akulenko ◽  
Ie. Torgalo ◽  
V. Vereschaka

To determine the optimal conditions for the synthesis of melanin by black yeast fungi Pseudonadsoniella brunnea (Basidiomycota, Agaricomycotina, Agaricomycetes, Polyporales, Meripilaceae), depending on the amount of L-tyrosine in the culture medium was the purpose of the work. The standard Malt Extract Broth (MEB) liquid nutrient medium was used within this study. L-tyrosine was added to the culture medium in a quantity of 0.01, 0.025 and 0.05%.To obtain the melanin the cultivation of Pseudonadsoniella brunnea was carried out at pH 1-1.5, temperature + 21 ± 1 ° C during 7 days. Statistical processing of the results was carried out using generally accepted methods of variation statistics. It has been established that the level of melanin synthesis by black yeast-like fungi Pseudonadsoniella brunnea depends on the amount of L-tyrosine introduced into the culture medium. The MEB nutrient medium containing 0.05% L-tyrosine in this series of experiments found to be the best composition for obtaining melanin by the strain-producer Pseudonadsoniella brunnea. Compared to control (MEB without L-tyrosine), the amount of melanin synthesized by Ps. brunnea in these conditions increased by 2.5 times. The further research into the optimal conditions for the cultivation of black yeast-like fungi Pseudonadsoniella brunnea in order to obtain melanin is relevant and promising.


2013 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. MBI.S10957 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subhadip Mahapatra ◽  
Debdulal Banerjee

Fungal exopolysaccharides (EPSs) have been recognized as high value biomacromolecules for the last two decades. These products, including pullulan, scleroglucan, and botryosphaeran, have several applications in industries, pharmaceuticals, medicine, foods etc. Although fungal EPSs are highly relevant, to date information concerning fungal biosynthesis is scarce and an extensive search for new fugal species that can produce novel EPSs is still needed. In most cases, the molecular weight variations and sugar compositions of fungal EPSs are dependent to culture medium composition and different physical conditions provided during fermentation. An inclusive and illustrative review on fungal EPS is presented here. The general outline of the present work includes fungal EPS production, their compositions and applications. An emphasis is also given to listing out different fungal strains that can produce EPSs.


1888 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 422-427
Author(s):  
Adam Dickie

About the beginning of this year I was requested by a sub-committee of the Government Grant Committee* to determine some of the components of a series of samples of sea water, which were to be collected during the year at various parts and at different times in the Clyde sea area by the observers of the Scottish Marine Station. The collections were chiefly made under the immediate direction of Dr H. E. Mill. Since January, accordingly, I have been working at this, and have completed in all eighty-nine analyses, the results of which I now take the liberty of placing before this Society. There are various reasons why this paper should consist of little more than tables of results, one of which is that, having little or no experience in the science of oceanography, it would be presumptuous in me to draw conclusions from my results which would no doubt strike any one acquainted with that science at once. Another reason is that, though acquainted with some of the physical conditions under which the samples were taken, such as depth, temperature, place of collection, and date, I am quite ignorant of other conditions quite as important, if not more so, in my estimation, as, for instance, presence or absence of some freshwater stream near place of collection, state of tide, raiafall, 'c,—all conditions which would no doubt influence more or less materially the salinity of the water.


The manner in which parental characters are transmitted to the offspring when different species of Echinoderms are crossed has been the subject of much experimental enquiry and quite contradictory conclusions have been arrived at by different investigators. Thus Vernon (13), who carried out a most extensive series of experiments with the species of the genera Arbacia, Echinus, Strongylocentrotus, Sphærechinus, and Echinocardium which are available at Naples, came to the conclusion that the condition of the genital glands of the parents (whether imperfectly ripe, fully ripe, or stale) determines in many cases whether or not a hybrid will be formed, and further that though in the majority of cases the hybrid exhibits purely maternal characters, yet it sometimes exhibits paternal characters also, and that this result is also due to the condition of ripeness of the genital glands of its parents. Herbst (5), who also worked at Naples and who used the genera Echinus, Strongylocentrotus, and Sphærechinus for his experiments, found also that the hybrids in many cases showed the paternal influence, but that the extent to which this influence was exhibited varied with the temperature. Doncaster (1), who likewise worked at Naples, also arrived at the conclusion that the greater or less development of paternal characters in the hybrid was due to the temperature. On the other hand, Loeb (7, 8) and his pupil Hagedoorn (4) came to the conclusion that the hybrid exhibited purely maternal characters, and Fischel (2) arrived at the same conclusion on the whole. This conclusion is the more remarkable because Hagedoorn in his experiments used two species of the same genus. Tennent (12) crossed species of the American genera Toxopneustes and Hipponoe and found that the characters of Hipponoe were dominant in the hybrid whichever way the cross was made, but that if the alkalinity of the sea-water were reduced by the addition of dilute acid the influence of Toxopneustes became increased. Lastly Loeb, Redman King, and Moore in a joint paper published quite recently (9), in which they record the results of experiments with the same two species which Hagedoorn used, arrive at the conclusion that the exhibition of paternal and maternal characters in the hybrid is governed by the principle of Mendelian dominance, since, as they assert, the same characters appear in the hybrid whichever way the cross is made, whether, that is to say, in any particular case the character in question is inherited from the male or from the female parent. During a study of the whole subject which I recently made with the object of summarising the present state of our knowledge of this question of the inheritance of paternal and maternal characters in the hybrid, I was struck with the necessity of a preliminary thorough investigation of the characters of the normal larvæ of the species used in hybridisation experiments. The amount of general acquaintance with Echinoderm larvæ displayed by several of the investigators who have attacked the subject is, to say the least, somewhat defective. Thus Herbst (5), who studied chiefly the cross between Sphærechinus and Strongylocentrotus, attaches great importance to the extent to which lattice-work appears in the skeleton of the arms of the hybrid. In the normal larva of Strongylocentrotus, it is true, all four arms are supported by unbranched calcareous rods, whilst in the normal larva of Sphærechinus, each of the two posterior arms is supported by parallel rods connected by cross-pieces like the steps of a ladder, an arrangement which is termed “lattice-work.” But Herbst fails to take into account the fact that in the normal larva of Strongylocentrotus a lattice-work skeleton can appear as a variation, and hence an attempt such as he makes to estimate quantitatively the influence of one parent by the amount of lattice-work which appears in the hybrid rests upon an insecure foundation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 310
Author(s):  
Tales Poletto ◽  
Marlove F. B. Muniz ◽  
Vinícius S. Fantinel ◽  
Renata F. Favaretto ◽  
Igor Poletto ◽  
...  

Sirosporium diffusum is the causal agent of the brown leaf spot disease on pecan trees that seriously damages the foliage of adult plants and seedlings. This fungal species is difficult to grow satisfactorily in a culture medium. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of different physical conditions on the development of S. diffusum. In the first assay, eight culture media and five light regimes were combined, while in the second, the three treatments that promoted highest sporulation were combined with three temperatures. The trials were conducted in a two-factorial arrangement in a fully randomized design with six replicates. V8, V8CaCO3, and CA media under a 24-h photoperiod produced the highest respective sporulations: 29 × 104, 35 × 104, and 41 × 104 conidia ml-1. The best temperature for sporulation was 20±1 °C for all culture media, especially V8CaCO3 and CA. The best artificial conditions for obtaining good mycelial growth and sporulation consisted of a photoperiod of 24 h, temperature of 20±1 °C and V8CaCO3 or CA culture medium.


1947 ◽  
Vol 157 (1) ◽  
pp. 452-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. F. P. Bisacre ◽  
G. H. Bisacre

The paper is a contribution towards a rational quantitative theory of the tool-life problem. In the first part of the paper, the authors discuss an adiabatic theory of high-speed metal cutting, with no coolant. In machining medium-carbon steel with dry tungsten-carbide, cutting takes place under two widely different physical conditions, depending on the speed of cutting. Plastic deformation of the metal takes place as the chip crosses the tool face, and a higher temperature is developed most intensely at or near the surface of the cutting in contact with the tool face. Consequently the temperatures generated are higher—perhaps much higher—in the lower layers of the chip than elsewhere. If the speed of cutting is high, there is not sufficient time for effective diffusion of heat to take place into the colder parts of the cutting; the heat in fact stays where it is generated. The conditions are adiabatic. On the other hand, when cutting is slow enough, there is time for complete diffusion of heat to take place, whereby the temperature becomes uniform through the thickness of the chip. This is the isothermal case. It is found that these extremes occur when Reynolds thermal number (speed × thickness of chip ÷ thermal diffusivity) is large or small, respectively. In the second part of the paper, a series of experiments made by M. F. Judkins and W. E. Uecker in 1933 on tool life is examined, and a rule is given that embodies the results of these tests with unexpected accuracy. In the third and last part of the paper, a study is made of those properties of the metal cut and of the tool that affect the life of the tool. The method of dimensional analysis is applied to deduce a general form for the life-law. Judkins and Uecker's experimental result conforms to this law within the limits of the tests. But further experiment alone can confirm the general form—in its wider application.


Author(s):  
E. J. Allen

1. Attempts to obtain good cultures of Thalassiosira gravida in a purely artificial medium, made by dissolving in doubly distilled water Kahlbaum's pure chemicals in the proportions in which the salts occur in sea-water, adding nitrates, phosphates and iron according to Miquel's method and sterilizing the medium, have not succeeded.If, however, a small percentage of natural sea-water (less than 1 per cent will produce a result) be added to the artificial medium and the whole sterilized excellent cultures are obtained, which are often better than any which have been got when natural sea-water forms the foundation of the culture medium.The result appears to be due to some specific substance present in minute quantity in the natural sea-water which is essential to the vigorous growth of the diatoms. The nature of this substance it has not been possible to determine, but some evidence seems to suggest that it is a somewhat stable organic compound.Provided the 1 per cent of natural sea-water is added, the various constituents of the artificial sea-water forming the basis of the culture medium can be varied in amount within wide limits. The salinity of the medium can also be considerably altered without serious detriment to the cultures.The experiments recorded are of interest as furnishing another instance of the importance in food substances of minute traces of particular chemical compounds. They may also eventually throw light upon the nature of the conditions in the sea which are specially favourable to the production of plant life and therefore also of the animal life which that plant life sustains.


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