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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1982 March; 43(3): 664–670.
PMCID: PMC241892
Impact of Mount St. Helens Eruption on Bacteriology of Lakes in the Blast Zone
J. T. Staley,1 L. G. Lehmicke,1 F. E. Palmer,1 R. W. Peet,1 and R. C. Wissmar2
1Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Fisheries Research Institute, 2 University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195
Abstract
Lakes lying within the blast zone of Mount St. Helens showed dramatic increases in heterotrophic bacterial numbers after the eruption of 18 May 1980. The total microscopic counts of bacteria in some of the most severely affected lakes were more than 107 cells per ml, an order of magnitude above the counts in outlying control lakes. Likewise, the numbers of viable bacteria reached levels of more than 106 cells per ml, compated with fewer than 104 cells per ml in control lakes. The CPS medium used for enumeration provided growth of up to 81.5% of the bacteria during sampling of one of the blast zone lakes. The high numbers of bacteria and the efficacy of the viable enumeration procedure are evidence that the lakes have been transformed rapidly from oligotrophy to eutrophy due to the eruption and its aftermath. Organic material leached from the devastated forest vegetation is thought to be responsible for the enrichment of heterotrophs. Total coliform bacteria were found in all of the blast zone lakes, and some lakes contained fecal coliform bacteria. Klebsiella pneumoniae was the predominant total coliform and was also identified as one of the fecal coliform bacteria, although Escherichia coli was the predominant species in that category. Our data indicate that bacterial populations peaked in the outer blast zone lakes in the summer of 1980 and in most of the inner lakes during the summer of 1981.
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Selected References
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