The fungus Fusarium oxysporum Schlecht f. sp. tulipae Apt. can produce ethylene abundantly in vitro when grown in Pratt's liquid medium with glucose as the only organic substrate. This production starts after a lag phase of about 4 days, and peak production occurs when mycelium weight has reached its maximum value. For several days the rate of production is more or less linearly dependent on pO2. The total production is also dependent on the oxygen concentration, but pure oxygen inhibits the total production by about 50% as compared with 21% oxygen. The high production in shake cultures, as compared with the low production in stagnant cultures, is probably the result of a better oxygen supply in the culture medium. The mycelium weight proved not to be a valid referential basis for the production of ethylene.
The ethylene production of several Fusarium species and formae speciales in vitro was measured under comparable conditions. All of them produced ethylene. Fusarium oxysporum Schlecht. ex Fr. f. tulipae Apt. produced much more than the other 18 strains investigated.
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