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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1977 July; 34(1): 42-46
Copyright © 1977 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Membrane Filter Technique for the Quantification of Stressed Fecal Coliforms in the Aquatic Environment

David G. Stuart, Gordon A. McFeters and John E. Schillinger

1 Department of Microbiology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59715

ABSTRACT

A two-layer membrane filtration (MF) medium (injury-mitigating MF [IM-MF]) and a procedure for the enumeration of injured fecal coliforms are described. These procedures included the addition of glycerol and acetate plus reducing agents to both layers of a two-layer medium and rinsing of the filter with a rich resuscitation medium. Some changes in incubation time and temperatures were used. This method was compared with the multiple-tube fermentation most-probable-number procedure and the one-step M-FC agar-membrane filter method (direct M-FC) in terms of fecal coliform recovery from various aquatic environments that cause bacterial injury. With chlorinated sewage effluents, results of the IM-MF technique were equal to or greater than the most probable number in 9 of 18 trials and were 1.3 to 19 times greater than the M-FC method. When sewage samples were chlorinated in the laboratory, fecal coliform counts with IM-MF equaled or exceeded the most probable number in 7 of 15 trials and always exceeded the M-FC. M-FC was exceeded by IM-MF in 30 of 33 trials with clean mountain stream water. Fecal coliform bacteria that were exposed to low levels of an iodophore in the laboratory produced IM-MF counts 3 to 10 times greater than those with M-FC. A biochemical rationale for the formation of the IM-MF medium is discussed.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1977 July; 34(1): 42-46
Copyright © 1977 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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