“…Sewage effluents, agricultural run-off and direct deposit of faecal materials from wild animals and birds are the major sources of the bacteria in aquatic environments (Alcaide et al, 1984;Baudart et al, 2000;Johnson et al, 2003;Abulreesh et al, 2005). Salmonella species have been found in almost all types of aquatic environments that receive faecal contamination, that include drinking water (Bhatta et al, 2007), rivers (Pianetti et al, 1998;Polo et al, 1998;Polo et al, 1999;Dionisio et al, 2000;Lemarchand & Lebaron, 2003;Arvanitidou et al, 2005;Haley et al, 2009), lakes (Claudon et al, 1971;Arvanitidou et al, 1995;Sharma & Rajput, 1996), ponds (Shellenbarger et al, 2008), marine waters (Matinez-Urtaza et al, 2004a;Martinez-Urtaza et al, 2004b;Martinez-Urtaza & Liebana, 2005;Harakeh et al, 2006), run-off water (Claudon et al, 1971), treated and untreated wastewater (Ho & Tam, 2000;Melloul et al, 2002;Espigares et al, 2006, Mafu et al, 2009 worldwide. Abulreesh et al (2004) were unable to detect salmonellae in water samples from a village pond that receives direct faecal contamination from waterfowl, nevertheless, they managed to isolate the bacterium from bottom sediments of the same pond.…”