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Article Dans Une Revue FEMS Microbiology Reviews Année : 2002

Microbiological safety of natural mineral water.

Résumé

Natural mineral water originates from groundwater, an oligotrophic ecosystem where the level of organic matter is low and of a very limited bioavailability. The bacterial populations that evolve in these ecosystems are heterotrophic and in starvation-survival state resulting from an insufficient amount of nutrients; for this reason they enter a viable but non-culturable state. After bottling, the number of viable counts increases rapidly, attaining 10(4)-10(5) colony-forming units ml(-1) within 3-7 days. These bacterial communities, identified by culture or with specific probes, are primarily aerobic, saprophytic, Gram-negative rods. Groundwater sources for natural mineral waters are selected such that they are not vulnerable to fecal contamination. Ecological data, especially the diversity and physiological properties of bacterial communities, are essential together with epidemiological studies in order to perform a risk analysis for natural mineral waters. On a continuing basis, the management of microbial risks has to rely on assessment of the heterotrophic plate count and, more specially, on detection of marker organisms, i.e. the classic fecal contamination indicators that have to be absent, and vulnerability indicators for which the occurrence should be as low as possible. It is also recommended to search regularly, but not routinely, for viral and protozoan pathogens.

Dates et versions

hal-00294373 , version 1 (21-07-2008)

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Citer

Henri Leclerc, Annick Moreau. Microbiological safety of natural mineral water.. FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 2002, 26 (2), pp.207-222. ⟨10.1111/j.1574-6976.2002.tb00611.x⟩. ⟨hal-00294373⟩

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