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Applied Microbiology logoLink to Applied Microbiology
. 1973 Sep;26(3):332–336. doi: 10.1128/am.26.3.332-336.1973

Comparison of Gelman and Millipore Membrane Filters for Enumerating Fecal Coliform Bacteria

William G Presswood 1, Lynn R Brown 1
PMCID: PMC379785  PMID: 4584578

Abstract

Tests of two leading brands of membrane filters used for enumerating fecal coliform bacteria showed that Gelman GN-6 filters recovered statistically more colonies of bacteria than did Millipore HAWG 047SO filters from pure cultures incubated at either 35 C (the optimal growth temperature) or 44.5 C (the standard temperature for the fecal coliform test). Standard membrane filter procedures with M-FC broth base were used to enumerate the organisms. Densities of colonies incubated on Gelman filters at 44.5 C averaged 2.3 times greater than those on Millipore filters. Plate counts of the bacteria at both temperatures indicated that incubation at 44.5 C did not inhibit propagation of fecal coliform bacteria. For the pour plates, M-FC broth base plus 1.5% agar was used. This modified medium compared favorably to plate count agar for enumerating Escherichia coli. At 35 and 44.5 C, colony counts on Gelman filters agreed closely with plate counts prepared concurrently, but Millipore counts were consistently lower than plate counts, especially at 44.5 C. Comparative analyses of river water for fecal coliform bacteria by the membrane filter technique gave results comparable to those for the pure cultures.

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Articles from Applied Microbiology are provided here courtesy of American Society for Microbiology (ASM)

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