2018 Volume 33 Issue 4 Pages 402-406
We herein described a new microbial isolation method using the interaction between the floating aquatic plant, duckweed, and microbes. We harvested microbial cells from Japanese loosestrife roots and co-cultivated these cells with aseptic duckweed using artificial inorganic medium for the plant for four weeks. During the co-cultivation, some duckweeds were collected every week, and the roots were used for microbial isolation using a low-nutrient plate medium. As a result, diverse microbial isolates, the compositions of which differed from those of the original source (Japanese loosestrife root), were obtained when the roots of duckweed were collected after 2 weeks of cultivation. We also successfully isolated a wide variety of novel microbes, including two strains within the rarely cultivated phylum, Armatimonadetes. The present study shows that a duckweed-microbe co-cultivation approach together with a conventional technique (direct isolation from a microbial source) effectively obtains more diverse microbes from a sole environmental sample.