2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2017.01.065
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Flow cytometric bacterial cell counts challenge conventional heterotrophic plate counts for routine microbiological drinking water monitoring

Abstract: Drinking water utilities and researchers continue to rely on the century-old heterotrophic plate counts (HPC) method for routine assessment of general microbiological water quality. Bacterial cell counting with flow cytometry (FCM) is one of a number of alternative methods that challenge this status quo and provide an opportunity for improved water quality monitoring. After more than a decade of application in drinking water research, FCM methodology is optimised and established for routine application, suppor… Show more

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Cited by 214 publications
(170 citation statements)
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References 125 publications
(274 reference statements)
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“…• What is the effect of UV irradiation on the nutrient availability and biostability 2 in spring water? Köster, & Egli, 2010;Van Nevel et al, 2017) also add significant value to this approach has yet to be evaluated. Irrespective of the applicability of currently emerging technologies, the general importance of microbiological online monitoring and automation (e.g., precipitation event-triggered automated sampling) is likely to increase in the near future (Besmer et al, 2016;Højris et al, 2016;Ryzinska-Paier et al, 2014;Stadler et al, 2016).…”
Section: Disinfectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• What is the effect of UV irradiation on the nutrient availability and biostability 2 in spring water? Köster, & Egli, 2010;Van Nevel et al, 2017) also add significant value to this approach has yet to be evaluated. Irrespective of the applicability of currently emerging technologies, the general importance of microbiological online monitoring and automation (e.g., precipitation event-triggered automated sampling) is likely to increase in the near future (Besmer et al, 2016;Højris et al, 2016;Ryzinska-Paier et al, 2014;Stadler et al, 2016).…”
Section: Disinfectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…FCM has become the method of choice for quantifying microbial cells in aquatic samples, combining high sample throughput with speed and accuracy Van Nevel et al, 2017). Moreover, FCM has proved to be a useful tool not only for assessing cell abundance and viability but also for microbial community profiling Prest et al, 2014Prest et al, , 2013Ramseier et al, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…fecal samples) and on coaggregated cells (biofilms/doublets/triplets). It was pointed out that several published dispersal protocols exist (see section 5.3 in for an overview). For example, predilution and sequential filtering over 30‐μm and 5‐μm filters is recommended for fecal material preparation (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%