New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstractsDirect counts of bacteria by a modified acridine orange method in relation to their heterotrophic activityAngela J. Ramsay*Cawthron Institute, P.O. Box 175, Nelson, New ZealandAbstract Modifying the acridine orange staining procedure used for direct counting of aquatic bacteria, by staining the bacteria after filtering instead of in solution, gave bright fluorescence and eliminated the need for filtering stained samples. Millipore, Sartorius, and Nucleopore filters all gave good results with the staining method. Counts on the Nucleopore polycarbonate filters were about twice as high as on Millipore and Sartorius cellulose filters. Bacteria were counted and their heterotrophic activity measured as uptake and respiration of 14C-glucose in 111 freshwater and marine samples. For standing waters which were not grossly polluted, bacterial counts per millilitre, using Millipore filters, varied between narrow limits (1.16-17.4 X 10'), but the mean heterotrophic activity per bacterium showed a much wider range of values (0.6-111 X 10~n pg.h"1).
N.Z. Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 12 (3) : 265-9.Received 12 July 1977; revision received 26 October 1977. PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (449K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process) This year's abstracts | Journal home page | All abstracts | Publishing home page |