Matthias, very nice important and thoughtful post. Reminded me of early discussions from my time in Tom Brock's lab that affected my entire career, on the nature of the 'killed' control. As with most things, Tom wrote up his thoughts and published them here (I have not been able to track down article online) -- Brock TD. 1978. The poisoned control in biogeochemical investigations. In: Krumbein, W.E. (editor). Environmental Biogeochemistry and Geomicrobiology. Ann Arbor Science Publishers, Ann Arbor, MI. 3:717-725
I think this is particularly difficult in soils -- autoclaving may change the chemical nature of the soil matrix. We had gone to gamma radiation; but after 30 days there remained some chance that activity would re-emerge.
Yes, it is not appropriate to ever compare among autoclaved, gamma irradiated or steamed samples and samples that have not be so treated, because in every case soil properties change (there is a paper on that from Stefan Scheu's group).
you may find very nice images of microplastics from Synbiobeta and novel ideas on how microbial consortiums, including Fungi, cooperate to degrade microplastics ! and innovative Startup dealing with microplastic degradation here !.
Matthias, very nice important and thoughtful post. Reminded me of early discussions from my time in Tom Brock's lab that affected my entire career, on the nature of the 'killed' control. As with most things, Tom wrote up his thoughts and published them here (I have not been able to track down article online) -- Brock TD. 1978. The poisoned control in biogeochemical investigations. In: Krumbein, W.E. (editor). Environmental Biogeochemistry and Geomicrobiology. Ann Arbor Science Publishers, Ann Arbor, MI. 3:717-725
I think this is particularly difficult in soils -- autoclaving may change the chemical nature of the soil matrix. We had gone to gamma radiation; but after 30 days there remained some chance that activity would re-emerge.
Best,
Allan
Thanks for writing.
Yes, it is not appropriate to ever compare among autoclaved, gamma irradiated or steamed samples and samples that have not be so treated, because in every case soil properties change (there is a paper on that from Stefan Scheu's group).
Can Biology Address the Microplastics Problem ?
you may find very nice images of microplastics from Synbiobeta and novel ideas on how microbial consortiums, including Fungi, cooperate to degrade microplastics ! and innovative Startup dealing with microplastic degradation here !.
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