The Role of Micro-Organisms
The Role of Micro-Organisms
The Role of Micro-Organisms
If we collected all the living material on Earth and weighed it, half
of the accumulated biomass would be microorganisms. Thats a
lot of cells: about 5x10^30 of them. Microbes live everywhere, deep in
the worlds oceans and crust to glaciers perched on mountain peaks.
They are found in every conceivable habitat, from the soil that we
use to grow our food to our digestive systems that we use to digest
our food.
Oxygen was
absent from the
Earths early
atmosphere, so the
first bacteria were
anaerobic.
These early
Earthlings were
probably similar to
purple and green
bacteria that
persist today.
These microorganisms
oxygenated the Earths
atmosphere, paving the
way for the evolution of
multi-cellular life.
VIRUSES
ALGAE
Algae are photosynthetic
organisms (contain chlorophyll)
and obtain their energy from the
sun and their carbon from carbon
dioxide.
Their size ranges from one
micron to many meters.
All organisms that use carbon
dioxide for their carbon
requirement are called
autotrophs.
Algae are generally beneficial in
aquaculture by supplying oxygen
FUNGI
Fungi are similar to algae, but they do not contain chlorophyll
and require pre-formed organic matter as energy and carbon
sources (e.g., sugars, fat, protein, and other carbohydrates).
Such organisms are called heterotrophs. Fungi, ranging in
size from a few microns to several centimetres, grow either
independently by feeding on decaying matter, or in association
with plants and animals.
Laetiporus gilbertsonii
Clavarioid fungi
spikey-fungi
PROTOZOA
Protozoa are heterotrophs, mostly free-living, feeding mainly by devouring
smaller microorganisms. Their size ranges between two and 200 micron
meters. A large group ofprotozoa, the Sporozoa, are parasites. Small
numbers of protozoa contain chlorophyll and can switch between
autotrophic and heterotrophic modes of feeding, based on light
conditions.
BACTERIA
Cellular structure
Micro-organisms are
always present in
the environment and
given the right
conditions of food
availability,
temperature and
other environmental
factors, they grow
and multiply.
Microbes
form the
backbone of
every
ecological
system by
controlling
global
biogeochemic
al cycling of
elements
essential for
life.
MICROBIAL PROCESS
Bacteria and other
microorganisms, most
notably fungi, are able
to metabolize and
transform numerous
organic and inorganic
compounds.
Therefore, man has
used them for
thousands of years for
making yogurt,
pickles, bread,
cheese, wine, and
more recently for
Process controlled by
microorganisms can occur
aerobically (in the presence of
oxygen) or anaerobically (with no
oxygen present).
The starting materials and the end products of such processes vary
based on the microorganisms' capabilities (as reflected in their genetic
makeup), and the environment in which these processes occur (e.g.,
availability of oxygen, temperature, salinity, pH, etc.
In a natural water body, e.g. river or lake, the number and type of
micro-organisms depends on the degree of pollution. The general
effect of pollution appears to be a reduction in species numbers. For
example in a badly polluted lake, there are fewer species but in
larger numbers, while in a healthy lake there can be many species
present but in lower numbers.
Given the ancient history of microbes, their global distribution, and their metabolic and genetic diversity, it is
not surprising that they are involved in all ecological processes on Earth. The types of ecological activities
depend on the species composition, population sizes, and physiological states of microbial communities.
Microbes play a key role in nutrient cycling in particular. The three main nutrients that all living organisms
require are nitrogen, phosphorus, and carbon. Microbiologists estimate that microbes are the largest reservoir
of nitrogen and phosphorus stocks on the planet and that they are tied with plants as a carbon reservoir. In
addition, microbes are important in the cycling of other nutrients, like sulfur and iron.
It is obvious, then, that understanding how microbes function in ecosystems is necessary to have a
comprehensive view of how the biological world works. The diversity of microbes, however, is the downfall of
efforts to study microbial ecology. Very complex systems, like those in soil, are so diverse that teasing apart
relationships between community members is nearly impossible. Less diverse ecosystems, like those in
hypersaline environments, provide a simpler place to start understanding microbial communities.
sauerkraut
yogurt