Abstract
This review emphasized the implications of recent data pertaining to the role that motility, chemotaxis, and adhesion play in microbial ecology. Some of these processes appear to promote colonization by allowing certain organisms to selectively "seek out" nutrients or sites of colonization. For example, chemotaxis to NO3- and NO2- may provide pseudomonads with such a strong competitive mechanism that it allows this group of bacteria to outcompete other members of the soil microbiota for these chemicals. Likewise, chemotaxis also allows other bacteria to enter and colonize the mucus gel lining the intestinal epithelium and thereby resist physical removal from the gut. On the other hand, the understanding of such mechanisms offers important new possibilities for the deliberate control of microorganisms for the benefit of man. To that end, much remains to be done before a thorough understanding of the ecology of the microflora of any ecosystem can be accomplished. It is hoped that this review will stimulate further work in this area, as well as to lead to collaboration between engineers and microbiologists, which should lead to fruitful and exciting research in the future.