“…C. elegans , an ubiquitous free‐living nematode which lives in soil and feeds on bacteria, sharing with humans many biological pathways, has become a widely used model organism for studying host interactions with microbes and virulence mechanisms of microbial infections (Anyanful et al, ; Barber, Norton, Wiles, & Mulvey, ; Burton, Pendergast, & Aballay, ; Mylonakis, Ausubel, Tang, & Calderwood, ). It has been reported that free‐living nematodes may serve as carriers or vectors of human enteric pathogens from soil resources, and these nematodes have been shown to be resistant to free chlorine and to offer protection to ingested pathogens against chemical sanitizers (Caldwell, Adler, Anderson, Williams, & Beuchat, ; Merkx‐Jacques et al, ).…”