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Microbes and Food Production

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posted:
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Organism Nutrition Locomotion Cell Wall Chloroplasts Cilia or flagella







Saccharomyces Heterotroph Absent Made of chitin Absent Absent

(extracellular

digestion



Amoeba Heterotroph Slides using Absent Absent Absent

(intracellular pseudopodia

digestion



Plasmodium Heterotroph Glides on Absent Absent Absent

(intracellular substrate

digestion)



Paramecium Heterotroph Swimming Absent Absent Cilia

(intracellular

digestion)



Euglena Autotroph and Swimming Absent Present Flagellum

heterotroph





Chlorella Autotroph None Made of Present Absent

cellulose

http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/geog101/textbook/earth_system/nitrogen_cycle_EPA.jpg

Industrial

fixation

Pseudomonas

denitrificans

Excretion

Mutualistic and death Active

Rhizobium Transport









Nitrobacter

Putrefaction



Free-living-

Azotobacter





Nitrosomonas

http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/geog101/textbook/earth_system/nitrogen_cycle_EPA.jpg

Denitrification

Conditions needed for anaerobic

autotrophic bacteria to convert

nitrates to nitrogen gas.

Industrial

1. No available oxygen

fixation

2. High nitrogen input



Pseudomonas

denitrificans

Excretion

Mutualistic and death Active

Nitrification Transport

Rhizobium

Conditions needed for the

aerobic autotrophic bacteria

to convert ammonia to nitrites Nitrobacter

Putrefaction

then nitrates:



Free-living- 1. Available oxygen

Azotobacter 2. Neutral pH

3. Warm temperatures



Nitrosomonas

http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/geog101/textbook/earth_system/nitrogen_cycle_EPA.jpg

Denitrification

• Bad for soil

• Removes nitrites

• Destroys ozone

• NO (one product- minor greenhouse gas,

contributes to global warming)

Raw Sewage- Adds pathogens to water

which in some countries may be used for

bathing or drinking (as well as irrigating

crops)

Diseases- E. coli, cholera, typhoid





Nitrate Fertilizer- Leads to

Eutrophication (overgrowth of a lake or

stream due to excess nutrients)



•Nitrates and Phosphates fertilize the algae

in water

•Algal bloom (overgrowth of algae)

•Decomposed by aerobic bacteria which

used up the oxygen. (BOD- Biochemical

Oxygen Demand- the amount of oxygen

needed by organisms over a set period of

time)

•Water is deoxygenated

•Fish (etc. ) die.

Raw Sewage- Adds pathogens to water

which in some countries may be used

for bathing or drinking (as well as To prevent contamination by raw

irrigating crops) sewage, saprophytic bacteria are

Diseases- E. coli, cholera, typhoid used. These bacteria break down

the organic material in raw sewage.



Nitrate Fertilizer- Leads to Trickling Bed Filter-

Eutrophication (overgrowth of a lake or •Bacteria adhere to stones

stream due to excess nutrients) •Cleaner water flows out bottom

•Excess bacteria settle out (in a

•Nitrates and Phosphates fertilize the algae second tank) and are removed

in water •Water is disinfected with chlorine.

•Algal bloom (overgrowth of algae)

•Decomposed by aerobic bacteria which Reed Bed-

used up the oxygen. (BOD- Biochemical •Artificial wetland

Oxygen Demand- the amount of oxygen •Nutrients from waste promote

needed by organisms over a set period of growth of reeds.

time) •Small Scale

•Water is deoxygenated

•Fish (etc. ) die.



From Damon :HL Biology

From Damon :HL Biology









Biomass- Manure and crops, or crop

by-products, can be used to make

methane and ethanol.



To make biogas (60% methane) need

anaerobic digestor.

•No free oxygen.

•Constant temperature of 35 ⁰C

•pH –not too acidic



•Ammonia and phosphate by-products

Methanogenesis

• Acidogenic bacteria convert organic matter to

organic acids and alcohol.



• Acetogenic bacteria make acetate, with carbon

dioxide and hydrogen as by-products from organic

acids and alcohol.



• Methanogenic bacteria create methane from either

the reaction of carbon dioxide and hydrogen or the

breakdown of acetate.

From Damon :HL Biology

Manure



Acidogenic bacteria (produce acids)





Organic acids alcohol



Acetogenic bacteria

(produce acetate)





Carbon dioxide + hydrogen acetate







Methanogenic bacteria (produce methane)





methane methane





CO2 + 4H2 CH4 + 2 H2 O CH3 COOH CH4 + CO2

From Damon :HL Biology

Microbes and Food Production



Objective F.4

Saccharomyces cerevisae

• Organism

• Yeast

• Pasteur in 1837 outlined its role in food

production (bread, wine, beer)

• Uses sugar for energy

• Reproduces by budding





users.ugent.be

Process?

• Glucose broken into two ethanol

• Two molecules of CO2 are by-products









www.bio.miami.edu

Beer

• Glucose-from grain (like barley)

• The grain is wetted to germinate www.vancouverseedbank.c



• Germination breaks down

a/catalog/product_info









starches into sugars.

• Maltose is an early sugar “malt”

• More water added “wort”

• Hops are added- bitter

• Wort and hops are boiled HOPS

www.botanical.com/botanical/

mgmh/h/hops--32.html

More on beer

• Yeast is added

• Yeast uses the maltose for food

• Maltose is a disaccharide

• Broken into 2 glucose molecules

• When all the sugar is used up

– Ethanol and carbon dioxide http://www.hgca.com/images/upload/barl

ey.jpg



• Filtered, pasteurized (heated to 82⁰) to kill the

yeast.

• Product contains 2-6 % alcohol

Wine

• There are many different strains of

saccharomyces cerevisiae.

• Alcohol kills yeast.

• Wine strains can survive a

higher alcohol content.

• Wine is not boiled



flavourofwines.com

Wine

• Crush grapes

• Add yeast (saccharomyces cerevisiae)

• Place in fermentation tank

• Let carbon dioxide escape

• Ethanol stays in tank







http://www.bath.ac.uk/bio-sci/research/profiles/wheals-a.html

Bread

• This time we care about the carbon dioxide!

• Sugar in the dough is utilized by

saccharomyces.

• CO2 makes bread rise

• Baking kills the yeast,

• evaporates the ethanol





www.kitchenproject.com/history/sour

terander.wordpress.com dough.htm

• Recipe for sourdough starter



• 1. Boil potatoes with the jackets on until they fall apart.

2.lift out the skins and mash potatoes in the water making a puree. cool

and save 2 cups of the puree adding it to 2 cups of flour and 2 Tbs. of

sugar.

Beat it smooth, then leave loosely covered in a warm place to start

fermentation. Usually there is a good effervescent action within a week.

To replenish your starter, add flour, water and a pinch of sugar. Leave it to

work.





Soy Sauce

“ A fine product since 3000 BC”





• Soy beans are fermented

• Different fungus Aspergillus oryzae









gryphonscry.wordpress.com http://www.yellowman.d www.bio.nite.go.jp/ngac/e/rib40-e.html

k/images/medium/food/

n8715035110106_MED

.jpg

Soy Sauce

Get some soy beans…

• Soak, boil, drain

• Mash and mix with toasted

wheat.

• Add fungus Aspergillus oryzae

• Leave for 3 days at 30⁰ C www.virginiagrains.com/Wh

eat%20Information.htm



• Add salt and water, ferment for 6-8 months

• Carbohydrates are broken down to glucose and ultimately

lactic acid and alcohol.

• Proteins are broken down to peptides and amino acids

• Filter and pasteurize.

• Sprinkle on your favorite food 

Sugar or salt preservation

• Increased sugar or salt dehydrates

– Salts-meat

– Sugar-fruit

• Reduces bacteria, yeast and molds

• Lets review hypotonic, hypertonic, and isotonic

• The contaminating cells are dehydrated also due to

the high osmotic pressure







blogs.kqed.org

To make jam…

• Boil fruit with sugar. Kills microorganisms,

dissolves sugar.

• Add pectin for jelling

• Seal in hot sterile jars

• Shelf life good without refrigeration

Preserving with Acid

(lowers intracellular pH of microorganisms/prevents growth)



• Pickles-preserved in vinegar (acetic acid) with

spices

• To make:

– Place vegetable in brine. Strain and rinse.

– Pour hot vinegar and spices over them.

– Place lids, Process in a hot water bath to make a

vacuum preventing fungi growth.

• Salt and acid!

pickle-

recipes.itsallgud.com

Lye (sodium hydroxide)

• Can raise intracellular pH of microroganisms.

• Prevents their growth

• E.g. hominy and lutefisk

Food Poisoning

• Salmonella is a bacterium that commonly causes food

poisoning.

• Occurs 12-72 hours after infection

– Diarrhea

– Fever

– Abdominal cramps

– Rarely- Reiter’s syndrome

• Last for years, arthritis, irritation of the eyes, painful

urination.

• May move to the bloodstream and cause death







http://omino.com/pixelblog/content/2007/salm

onella/salmonella.jpg

Salmonella transmission

• Lives in animal intestines

– Ineffective hand washing

– Contaminated food

– Reptile handling

– Cutting boards

– Irrigation

– Raw eggs

– Unpasteurized dairy

falloutofline.wordpress.com/2008/12/26/041-eggs

Treatment

• Treat dehydration

– Water, maybe with a

little sugar and salt

– IV fluids if needed

• Antibiotics if in

bloodstream









http://www.krider.com/MPj03211260000%5B1%5D.jpg



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