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1.
Int J Food Microbiol ; 69(3): 191-8, 2001 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11603856

RESUMEN

The ability of four species of Aeromonas (two of clinical and two of environmental origin) to survive and/or grow in tap water microcosms supplemented with sodium thiosulphate was tested. After bottling, the autochthonous microflora reached 6 x 10(5) cfu ml(-1) after a 5-day incubation period in tap water unfiltered and which was non-autoclaved. In filtered tap water, "ultramicrocells" were detected and final populations of ca. 10(6) cfu ml(-1) after 7 days were obtained. Aeromonas was inoculated at an initial cell concentration of ca. 10(4) cfu ml(-1). All strains were able to grow in tap water samples, which were filtered and autoclaved, and a final concentration of 10(5)-10(6) cfu ml(-1) was observed. Any inherent capability of Aeromonas to grow in tap water was eliminated by the presence of autochthonous microflora and "ultramicrocells" bacteria. Survival rates were strain- and microcosm-dependent. In unfiltered-non-autoclaved water, viable counts declined to below the detection limit (i.e. 1 log cfu ml(-1)) in 1.5 to 20 days. The declines in viable counts were even more pronounced in the filtered microcosm. Although inoculation ratios (100/1 in unfiltered-non-autoclaved and 1,000/1 in filtered microcosms) were favourable for aeromonads, at least for I to 3 days, the organisms disappeared in these microcosms. Thus, competition for nutrients was an unlikely cause of the limitation of aeromonads. The bacteriolytic effect of enzymes released by membrane vesicles from the autochthonous microflora and of "tail phage-like particles" bacteriocins were suggested as an in situ control of aeromonad populations. The present study showed that environmental strains of Aeromonas had no ecological advantage over clinical isolates. Thus, waterborne infections and contaminations of foods by pathogenic Aeromonas species could not be discounted.


Asunto(s)
Aeromonas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Agua Dulce/microbiología , Recuento de Colonia Microbiana , Filtración , Humanos , Microscopía Electrónica de Transmisión de Rastreo , Esterilización , Factores de Tiempo , Microbiología del Agua , Abastecimiento de Agua
2.
Rev Palaeobot Palynol ; 110(3-4): 191-208, 2000 Jul 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10930605

RESUMEN

Modern soil and litter samples from southeastern Cameroon, collected along a continuous forest-savanna transect were analysed for pollen content to define modern pollen-vegetation relationships. The pollen results, completed and compared with botanical inventories, leaf area index and basal area measurements performed in the same area, clearly registered the physiognomy, the main floristic composition and floral richness of the two sampled ecosystems. Distortions were observed between sampled vegetations and their pollen rain, related to important differences in pollen production and dispersal of plant species: this is a general feature in many tropical regions. The pollen data in the area studied reflected well the recent transgression of forest versus savanna. This permitted us to define inside the forest ecosystem more successional vegetation communities than the botanical surveys allowed.

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