Viability assessed with the most probable number dilution culture method after chemical treatment of ballast water reveals the presence of false negatives from an approved vital stain method

Gert Hansen*, Lea Tolstrup, Gitte Petersen, Rémi Maguet, Torben Madsen

*Corresponding author af dette arbejde

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1 Citationer (Scopus)

Abstract

The present study compares the CMFDA/FDA + motility- and the Most Probable Number (MPN) Dilution Culture + Motility methods for testing the viability of ≥10–<50 μm organisms in chlorine treated ballast water. The results of both methods were within the regulatory compliance criterion <10 organisms/mL, but the MPN-method revealed that growth-outs did occur. While the CMFDA/FDA method showed <0.5 organisms/mL, the MPN-method gave approx. 6 organisms/mL. This demonstrated that false negatives, i.e. living but not stained organisms, may occur when using the CMFDA/FDA-method for compliance testing of chemical treated ballast water. Organisms surviving the treatment were primarily the dinoflagellate Scrippsiella sp. and various coccoid chlorophytes present in a brackish- and freshwater test, respectively. It is suggested that their resilience to the chemical treatment is the ability to transform into a temporary cyst (Scrippsiella sp.) or the presence of a chemical resistant cell wall (certain chlorophytes).
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer116586
TidsskriftMarine Pollution Bulletin
Vol/bind205
Antal sider7
ISSN0025-326X
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

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