The selectivity of KF streptococcus agar (KF) for monitoring fecal streptococci (FS) in seawater was examined in 234 samples of Mediterranean water and compared with the selectivity of M-Enterococcus agar (M-Ent) for 124 samples and with bile-esculin-azide agar (BEA) for 17 samples. KF was found to be unsuitable for marine water because Vibrio alginolyticus and other gram-negative bacilli indigenous to this environment grew well on it and produced red colonies identical to those of FS. In 26% of samples, some with high counts of red colonies on the membrane filters (MF), there were no streptococci, only gram-negative bacilli and staphylococci, and in an additional 23.1% the streptococci constituted less than 50% of the "typical" red colonies on the MF. V. alginolyticus also produced FS-like colonies on MF incubated on BEA but was not isolated from MF incubated on M-Ent. Although staphylococci grew and produced FS-like colonies on all three media, M-Ent was the most selective since no gram-negative bacilli were isolated from MF incubated on it.
CITATION STYLE
Yoshpe-Purer, Y. (1989). Evaluation of media for monitoring fecal streptococci in seawater. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 55(8), 2041–2045. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.55.8.2041-2045.1989
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