A citronellol-utilizing bacterium was isolated that accumulated a polyester consisting of 3-hydroxybutyric acid (3HB) and of medium-chain-length 3-hydroxyalkanoic acids (3HAMcL) from various carbon sources up to approximately 70% of the cellular dry matter if the cells were cultivated in a mineral salts medium under nitrogen limitation. In octanoate-grown cells, for instance, the polyester consisted of 87.5 mol% 3HB and 12.5 mol% 3-hydroxyoctanoic acid (3HO), whereas it consisted of 10.3 mol% 3HB, 16.7 mol%0 3HO and 73.0 mol% 3-hydroxydecanoic acid (3HD) in gluconate-grown cells. However, the results of various experiments indicated that a blend rather than a copolyester was synthesized in the cell. It was the only strain among 45 different recently isolated citronellol-utilizing bacteria that accumulated such a polyester. All other citronellol-utilizing bacteria behaved like Pseudomonas aeruginosa with respect to their polyhydroxyalkanoic acid (PHA) biosynthetic capabilities and accumulated PHA consisting of 3HA~cL with 3HO and 3HD as the main constituents from octanoate or gluconate, respectively, whereas 3HB was never present. None of 232 different heavy-metal-resistant bacteria was able to accumulate PHA composed of 3HB plus, for example, 3HO. Only 20.3% did not accumulate any PHA at all, 44.8% accumulated PHB from gluconate, and 34.9% behaved like P. aeruginosa. Many bacteria belonging to the latter group were distinguished from the other b y rapid growth in nutrient broth and in gluconate mineral salts medium and by their ability to grow in the presence of a high concentration (up to 1.5%, w/v) of octanoate.