“…Aeromonas hydrophila is transmitted to fish through contaminated water or infected animals, and this bacterium may also cause some human diseases such as gastroenteritis and diarrhoea (Blake et al, 1980;Daskalov, 2006;Ljungh et al, 1977). Many different methods have been used for detection and determination of pathogenic bacteria, including solid and aqueous culture media (Kiyohara et al, 1982;Xie et al, 2005), gram stain (Nugent et al, 1991), biochemical studies (coagulase, oxidase, and catalase) (Hjelm et al, 2004;Raus and Love, 1983;Sumner and Taylor, 1989), impedance measurement (Suehiro et al, 2003), flow cytometry (Gunasekera et al, 2000), adenosine triphosphate (ATP) assessment (Chen and Godwin, 2006), polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (Belgrader et al, 1999), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and other novel techniques (Mansfield and Forsythe, 2000;Ruzicka et al, 2016). All conventional methods have at least one of these disadvantages: low detection accuracy, long time of detection, and the high detection cost (de Boer and Beumer, 1999;Gunasekera et al, 2000;Jorgensen and Turnidge, 2015;Megraud, 1996).…”