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To: js1138


I don't believe this. For example, if mutation is a "designed" response to antibiotics, then the mutation rate would be very high in the presense of an antibiotic. After all, a given colony of bacteria is composed of nearily identical clones.


The mutation rate wouldn't necessarily be very high.  There are many other factors involved (such as the amount of outside stimulii received).  As far as "nearly identical" is concerned, they are still separate and distinct organisms and are not nearly identical as we would first think.

But the rate doesn't change. all that happens is that survivors increase in numbers because they are the only ones left standing.

If a bacterium gets a less than life-threatening dose of poison, what's so unreasonable about the fact that it develops a further immunity against said poison?  This is not mutation.  The same bacterium after a period of time can lose said immunity.
312 posted on 03/28/2002 9:50:35 AM PST by Frumious Bandersnatch
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To: Frumious Bandersnatch
If a bacterium gets a less than life-threatening dose of poison, what's so unreasonable about the fact that it develops a further immunity against said poison? This is not mutation.

Ask a biologist this question and get back with me. I don't have the references at hand to counter you, but I'm sure you are wrong about this. Bacteria re clones. Antibiotic resistence does require mutation.

I'll wait for a reference refuting this.

313 posted on 03/28/2002 10:07:06 AM PST by js1138
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