Check out this story: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-14592877
"I personally prefer lagers to ales", Dr Hittinger told BBC News.
Wow, you beat me to it. I just posted the same story from Sciencedaily in the Yeast forum.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/08/110822151019.htm
Considering the amount of generations yeast go through in a very short period of time, isn't it much more likely that lager yeast developed from a mutation of ale yeast that was already being used to brew in colder conditions?
Ale and lager yeast are not in the family or something. At least they have different names in latin![]()
I am no microbiologist, and this is probably off topic, but yeast multiply asexually, so I can't follow the reasoning that putting a cold loving yeast in together with a warm loving yeast would produce a "hybrid" yeast. They don't mate.
Methinks the author is also no microbiologist.
They can conjugate though.
Conjugation does not typically occur in yeast in the sense that it does in some bacteria (if that is what you are referring to).They can conjugate though.
So you're saying we shouldn't try eating oak galls? :cross:
Good one!See the edit to my post. I have a lot of gall to mislead you in this way.