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Sourdough (rec.food.sourdough) Discussing the hobby or craft of baking with sourdough. We are not just a recipe group, Our charter is to discuss the care, feeding, and breeding of yeasts and lactobacilli that make up sourdough cultures. |
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I was asked what the life cycle of bacteria and fungi in sourdough
culture was, ie how long did they live, and how did they reproduce. I dont know the answer can anyone help? Paddy |
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On Dec 5, 4:35*pm, padriac > wrote:
> I was asked what the life cycle of bacteria and fungi in sourdough > culture was, ie how long did they live, and how did they reproduce. I > dont know the answer can anyone help? Paddy That's not a straight-forward answer, as the bacteria and yeast in sourdough are quite variable, divide through different ways, and live for different lengths of time. Not only that, but temps, pH, and a whole other range of conditions can change the answer. In terms of how the reproduce, most of the bacteria do it through binary fission; the cell duplicates everything it needs and then splits in half. Yeast generally reproduce by budding; basically the new cell forms as a small "bud" on the side of the mother cell, and the bud is subsequently released. That said, some types of yeast divide by binary fission, just like bacteria. Yeast reproduction is further complicated by the fact that yeast can reproduce asexually (i.e. the division produces a photocopy of the mother cell) and sexually (i.e. the yeast join their genetic material with another yeast, before reproducing). Exactly how much of asexual vs. sexual reproduction you'll get varies based on the exact strains of yeast in your starter and the growing conditions. Bacteria can also engage in a limited form of "sex", in that some bacteria have ways of passing DNA between each other. Once again, whether or not this occurs in your starter will depend on the bacteria present and the growing conditions. As for lifespan, that is not as cut-and-dried a question as you may think. Since these organisms reproduce by dividing themselves, it isn't exactly clear which new cell is the "child" and which the "parent". As such lifespan is not always easy to define with these organisms. One can even take the point-of-view that any single-celled organism is as "old" as the species - several million years in the case of most of the bacteria/yeast that you'll find in your culture - simply because every cell alive today is a product of divisions going all the ways back to the first cell of the species. Those caveats aside, the generation time (i.e. time from one cell division to another) is generally going to be between 30min and 1-2hrs in a fresh starter. As the starter is consumed, the generation time will get longer and longer. Eventually the bacteria/yeast will run out of food and go into dormancy. Depending on the bacteria/yeast, and the form of dormancy they go into, that dormant state may be stable for years, decades, even centuries. Bryan |
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Thanks Bryan, a very thorough answer and I understand it which is even
better. I love the mystery around the division and which is new which is old. Thank you. Paddy |
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