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Microbiological comparison of surface soil and unsaturated subsurface soil from a semiarid high desert

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Title Microbiological comparison of surface soil and unsaturated subsurface soil from a semiarid high desert
Names Colwell, Frederick (creator)
Date Issued 1989-09 (iso8601)
Abstract Thirty-two chemoheterotrophic bacteria were isolated from unsaturated subsurface soil samples obtained
from ca. 70 m below land surface in a high desert in southeastern Idaho. Most isolates were gram positive
(84%) and strict aerobes (79%). Acridine orange direct counts of microbes in one subsurface sample showed
lower numbers than similar counts performed on surface soils from the same location (ca. 5 x 10⁵ versus 2 x
10⁶ cells per g [dry weight] of soil), but higher numbers than those from plate counts performed on the
subsurface material. Another sample taken from the same depth at another location showed no evidence of
colonies under identical conditions. Soil analyses indicated that subsurface sediments versus surface soils were
slightly alkaline (pH 7.9 versus 7.4), had a higher water content (25.7 versus 6.3%), and had lower organic
carbon concentrations (0.05 to 0.17 versus 0.25% of soil dry weight). Analyses of biologically relevant gases
from the unsaturated subsurface indicated an aerobic environment. As in other unsaturated soil environments,
either a high proportion of bacteria in these subsurface sediments are not viable or they are incapable of growth
on conventional media under aerobic conditions. The presence and numbers of bacteria in these deep sediments
may be influenced by colonization opportunities afforded by periodic percolation of surface water through
fractures in overlying strata.
Genre Article
Identifier Colwell, F. S., (1989) Microbiological comparison of surface soil and unsaturated subsurface soil from a semiarid high desert. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 55(9), 2420-2423.

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