Bacteriophages of enteric bacteria in drinking water, comparison of their distribution in two countries.

R Armon, R Araujo, Y Kott, F Lucena, J Jofre

Faculty of Civil Engineering, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel.

Journal Article: Journal of Applied Microbiology (impact factor: 2.1). 12/1997; 83(5):627-33.

Abstract

The presence of bacteriophages infecting enteric bacteria was tested in more than 1500 drinking water samples in Israel and Spain. Bacteriophages tested were somatic coliphages, F-specific bacteriophages and Bacteroides fragilis bacteriophages. The three groups of bacteriophage were isolated in 100 ml water samples by the presence/absence test with similar frequencies, which ranged from 4.4% for somatic coliphages to 6.1% for bacteriophages infecting Bact. fragilis. In contrast, the frequency of isolation of bacteriophages was significantly higher than the frequency of isolation of faecal coliforms, which averaged only 1.9%. No significant differences were observed between the frequencies of isolation between the samples tested in Spain and those tested in Israel. The percentage of groundwater samples containing faecal coliforms and somatic coliphages was reduced significantly by chlorination, despite known deficiencies. However, there was no effect on the occurrence of F-specific bacteriophages and Bact. fragilis bacteriophages.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

100 ml water samples
 
1500 drinking water samples
 
bacteriophage
 
Bacteriophages
 
bacteriophages infecting Bact
 
bacteriophages infecting enteric bacteria
 
Bacteroides fragilis bacteriophages
 
deficiencies
 
F-specific bacteriophages
 
faecal coliforms
 
fragilis
 
fragilis bacteriophages
 
frequencies
 
Israel
 
presence/absence test
 
similar frequencies
 
somatic coliphages
 
Spain
 
three groups