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Pellicle
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''Pellicles'' form when the surface of the beer is exposed to oxygen <ref>[http://www.themadfermentationist.com/2009/11/brewing-sour-beer-at-home.html Brewing Sour Beer at Home. The Mad Fermentationist Blog. Michael Tonsmeire. 11/06/2009. Retrieved 02/28/2015.]</ref> One theory is that the formation of a ''pellicle'' allows the organism to access the small amount of oxygen that is present in the headspace of the fermentation vessel. Another theory, and one that may be less accurate according to Dr. Matt Humbard, is that the ''pellicle'' protects the beer from other microorganisms <ref name="matt"></ref>. Popular thought is that the formation of a pellicle is not indicative of the quality of the sour beer that is being produced; it is only an indication that oxygen has entered the fermentation vessel and that the microbes are reacting to that exposure.
==Note About the Science and Terminology==
(This section in progress)
As with some things in science that are not greatly explored, terminology isn't always agreed upon or fully established. Pellicles are a good example of this. It's been stated on this wiki and elsewhere that a pellicle is a subtype of biofilm. However, the widely accepted definition of a "biofilm" in biology doesn't describe pellicles that we see in fermentation. The widely accepted definition of a "biofilm" is an aggregate of microorganisms where the cells adhere to each other on a surface <ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=-ZDKAQAAQBAJ&pg=PT87&lpg=PT87&dq=brock+microbiology+biofilm&source=bl&ots=PwNZ20KFqq&sig=19lvlfqYj8bE7roiA7g4oJ3Xl0E&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CCcQ6AEwAWoVChMImZaUmN_AxwIVVFmICh1pQgk0#v=onepage&q=brock%20microbiology%20biofilm&f=false e-Study Guide for Brock Biology of Microorganisms, textbook by Michael T. Madigan.]</ref>. Pellicles in beer do not attach to a solid surface, they appear on the "air-liquid interface" (the surface of the beer). They are also not colonies within an adhesive <ref name="Bryan">[https://www.facebook.com/groups/MilkTheFunk/permalink/1131334646894748/?comment_id=1131986723496207&offset=0&total_comments=57&comment_tracking=%7B%22tn%22%3A%22R3%22%7D Conversation with Bryan Heit about Pellicles on MTF. 08/20/2015.] </ref>. To make matters even more confusing, the two widely accepted definitions of a "pellicle" in biology are the outer boundary of a protozoa cell <ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=ACBcDjDLuNAC&pg=PA38&lpg=PA38&dq=pellicle+biology&source=bl&ots=58e43A_9h-&sig=ViakT4Ectu4DOlqoSWRCPFJ73iw&hl=en&sa=X&sqi=2&ved=0CGIQ6AEwDGoVChMIp6WkouTAxwIVgpmICh0F1wXO#v=onepage&q=pellicle%20biology&f=false Biology of Protozoa. D.R. Khanna. Discovery Publishing House, Jan 1, 2004. Pg 38.]</ref>, and the protein film that forms on the surface of teeth <ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_pellicle Wikipedia. Dental Pellicle. Retrieved 08/23/2015.]</ref>.
The bottom line is that what is referred to as a "pellicle" in fermentation has not been widely studied, and the terminology is not widely established yet scientifically. Indeed, when researching "biofilms" and "pellicles", results will mostly refer to the more well established topics. Research done on traditional biofilms cannot necessarily be extrapolated to the pellicle phenomenon seen in fermentation.