Tanks (39 cm X 30 cm X 27 cm) containing marine sediment overlaid with various amounts of sterilised commercial fish food pellets and seawater were used to study the emergence of microorganisms capable of forming colonies on TSCA media in both the presence and absence of 25 mu g/ml oxytetracycline. All experimental systems were free of oxytetracycline. Initial levels of culturable organisms in the sediments used in these experiments were 7.1 . 10(4) cfu/g of which 0.2% were capable of growth on the oxytetracycline-containing agar. In tanks containing no feed, the number of resistant cfu/g increased slightly, from 1.8 . 10(4) to 5.1 . 10(4) cfu/g, over 70 days incubation at 8.5-12 degrees C. In the tank containing low levels (1-2 cm depth) of feed, the increase in resistant organisms was from 4.9 . 10(3) to 2.3 . 10(4) cfu/g. There was no significant increase in the relative size of the resistant subpopulation in either tank. In the tank containing high levels (16-17 cm depth) of fish feed, the levels of oxytetracycline-resistant cfu's/g rose from below the limit of detection (< 5 . 10(1)) to 1.9 . 10(8) and their relative abundance rose to 34% by the end of the experiment (t = 70 days). The resistant flora isolated from the tanks with high levels of feed were characteristically slow-growing and resistant to high levels (> 512 mu g/ml) of oxytetracycline. Over 50% of these strains were insensitive to oxolinic acid, cotrimoxazole and furazolidone, but the frequency of sensitivity to ampicillin and chloramphenicol was high. In contrast, the flora isolated from the sediment used in all tanks exhibited more rapid growth and lower levels of resistance to oxytetracycline. These strains were more frequently sensitive to the other antimicrobial agents.