1887

Abstract

SUMMARY

sp. of soil yeast, probably of the ‘ starkeyi ’ or ‘ lipofer ’ type, degraded paraquat over a wide range of pH and temperatures, extreme values of which reduced growth but not paraquat degradation. The organism withstood high concentrations of the herbicide.

Growth in nitrogen-depleted broth amended with paraquat showed a lag phase of about 24 h. There was no lag with (NH)S0 either alone or with paraquat, but in the latter case paraquat degradation was delayed for 24 h.

A 24 h exposure to paraquat and a carbon source was necessary for synthesis of the paraquat-catabolizing system.

The organism grew well on soil extract and malt extract and media containing (NH)SO or NHNO as nitrogen sources; it grew with urea or NaNO after a lag of 24 h or longer, but not on biuret or NaNO. Atmospheric N was fixed in the presence of added molybdate. The presence of alternative nitrogen sources did not prevent or delay paraquat degradation.

A variety of mono-, di- and polysaccharide materials was used as carbon and energy source. Growth was not obtained with powdered cellulose, carboxy-methyl- cellulose, lactose or paraquat as sole carbon source. The organism was unable to ferment carbohydrates or degrade paraquat anaerobically; it degraded commercial formulations of paraquat, but growth and degradation were affected by increasing concentrations of formulating additives.

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/content/journal/micro/10.1099/00221287-70-1-43
1972-04-01
2024-04-27
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