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THE INCIDENCE AND THERMAL RESISTANCE OF MESOPHILIC SPORES FOUND IN MILK AND RELATED ENVIRONMENTS
Author(s) -
RIDGWAY J. D.
Publication year - 1958
Publication title -
journal of applied bacteriology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.889
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2672
pISSN - 0021-8847
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2672.1958.tb00125.x
Subject(s) - spore , bacillus licheniformis , food science , feces , heat resistance , bacillus subtilis , biology , raw milk , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , bacteria , materials science , genetics , composite material
SUMMARY: A spore ‘spectrum’ is described of aerobic mesophiles capable of resisting different heat treatments. It is shown that B. licheniformis is the most common spore former found in bulk milk but since its spores are rapidly destroyed at 100°, the more heat resistant B. subtilis is the dominant surviving spore former in commercial sterilized milk. The thermal resistance of strains of B. subtilis and B. licheniformis isolated from different sources has been investigated and the strains of B. subtilis typed according to the behaviour of their spores when heated at 100°. All strains of B. licheniformis were destroyed more rapidly by boiling for 2 min than strains of B. subtilis but only those strains of the latter which showed some degree of heat activation were more resistant than B. licheniformis . The ‘resistant’ and heat activated strains of B. subtilis appear to be sparsely distributed in nature and were only isolated from sterilized milk where the heat treatment applied would tend to eliminate other strains. The spore content of bovine faeces was similar to that in bulk milk and the total spore content varied seasonally, the spore content of faeces being on the average a hundred times greater during indoor feeding than during the period when the cattle were fed outside. A faecal infection of the milk in the ratio of 1:10 4 would infect the milk with spores at about the same concentration as they are found in bulk raw milk, and it is suggested that bovine faeces could be a primary source of spore formers in milk supplies.