Postgraduate
MA in conservation of wall painting
RESEARCH PROJECTS
The significance of appropriate sampling and cultivation techniques in the effective assessment of biodeterioration
(Sponsored by ENGLISH HERITAGE) Caroline Kyi
Summary
In order to understand the mechanisms of microbial aggression,
microbiologists have aimed to isolate organisms from their
original environment and cultivate them in vitro.
This approach has limitations: sampling and cultivation are
processes that exert selective influences on organisms removed
from their original environment. In addition, many organisms
may not be cultivatable
if the appropriate nutritional and environmental conditions
are not provided. Consequently, a complete image of the dynamic
and complex nature of biodeterioration is extremely difficult
to establish.

The present research has involved a review of the microbiological
methods currently used for the sampling of organisms from cultural
material. Using the biodeterioration of the Romanesque wall
paintings at Hardham Church (West Sussex) as an investigative
case study, a variety of techniques used for sampling÷brushes,
direct agar, fragment, loop, needle, swab, tape and velvet÷were
assessed for their ability to collect a representative sample
of viable organisms.
Further investigations aimed to cultivate the sampled organisms
on a variety of media, so that the effects of variations in
the type of medium could be assessed. In an attempt to replicate
the nutritional conditions of the painted wall, a 'Hardham
wall salts' medium was developed. It was found that pigmented
organisms were more likely to grow on a minimal salts medium
(Pseudomonas basal medium) containing all elements
essential for growth in specific quantities.
Pigmented organisms isolated for subsequent stages of investigation
were identified by gram-stains and api test systems. A range
of gram-negative Pseudomonas-like species displaying
a diverse range of metabolic activity were revealed. Stock
cultures of the organisms of interest were made, and finally
the influence of temperature and relative humidity on the growth
of isolated pigmented organisms was examined. It was found
that reduction in temperature caused a decrease in the growth
and development of organisms, and that the pigmentation phenomenon
developed over the period of cultivation with an increase in
cell mass. Variation in relative humidity did not yield useful
results since the variable was swamped by the available moisture
in the nutrient media.

Recent advances in molecular biology have provided new tools
for microbiological investigations÷such as PCR÷that
may overcome the limitations associated with traditional methods
of sampling and cultivation. However, many of these methods
are intended to identify the species associated with biodeterioration
rather than to investigate the mechanisms of microbiological
decay. At present, sampling and cultivation to produce a stock
culture remains the most feasible method of assessing microbiological
activity, despite its limitations. However, a combination of
molecular and microbiological methods may soon provide the
best approach to understanding the mechanisms of biodeterioration.
July 2000
