One specialized and unique biological niche that supports the growth of microbes is the intracellular space between cells of higher plants. It turns out that each plant supports a suite of microorganisms known as endophytes [4]. These microorganisms do not cause overt symptoms on the plants in which they live [5]. Furthermore, because so little work on these endophytes has been done, it is suspected that untold numbers of novel fungal and bacterial genera exist as plant-associated microbes and their diversity might parallel that of the higher plants [4]. Such a specific search is governed by the fact that some endophytes could have coevolved with their respective higher plant and, as a result, already exist compatibly with a higher life-form. Thus, we have begun a concerted search for novel endophytic microbes, with the prospect that they could produce novel bioactive products as well as possess processes that might prove useful.