RT Journal Article SR Electronic(1) A1 Hallbeck, Lotta A1 Pedersen, KarstenYR 1990 T1 Culture parameters regulating stalk formation and growth rate of Gallionella ferruginea JF Microbiology, VO 136 IS 9 SP 1675 OP 1680 DO https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-136-9-1675 PB Microbiology Society, SN 1465-2080, AB The growth of Gallionella ferruginea in a mineral salts solution with carbon dioxide and iron sulphide was studied by acridine orange stained direct count and most probable number techniques. G. ferruginea grew to 2 × 106 cells ml−1 with a generation time of 8·3 h under aerobic gradient conditions. The optimum temperature for growth was 20 °C. No growth was obtained under anaerobic conditions, or without carbon dioxide. A method was developed for measuring the length of the stalks formed by G. ferruginea. When growing exponentially, the bacterium was freeliving, without stalks, and motile with one polar flagellum. A net production of stalk per cell began when the cell number exceeded 6 × 105 ml−1 if the pH exceeded 6. This occurred when growth entered the stationary phase. The stalk length increased from 3 × 103 μm ml−1 (detection limit) to 1·8 × 108 μm ml−1, during a 400 h growth experiment. There was no stalk formation at growth conditions where ferrous iron was stable, suggesting that stalk formation may be a protection mechanism against an increasing reducing capacity of ferrous iron as it becomes unstable in an environment that becomes oxidized. The results indicate that favourable growth conditions for G. ferruginea may be those present in reduced ground waters, rather than those in ditches, drainage tubes, wells, etc., where stalk-forming G. ferruginea can usually be found., UL https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/micro/10.1099/00221287-136-9-1675