Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2091294 Journal of Microbiological Methods 2006 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

A method to determine the individual lag time (lag) distributions of immobilized bacteria was presented. The method was based on the image analysis of the bacterial colony growth. The lag distributions were retrieved from the distributions of the detection times (Td) required to form macroscopically visible colonies. Using this method, the lag distributions on agar for Listeria monocytogenes cells previously subjected to two situations reproducing conditions encountered during the contamination of cheese, were determined. The results were presented and compared with lag distributions obtained with an established method based on the time to detection of turbidity in broth. An original method to retrieve lag in broth and agar without any knowledge of the growth rate was also proposed. In order not to bias the distributions of lag on agar the impact of spatial separation between colonies on colony growth rates was quantified. Means and standard deviations of lag distributions for the two different stresses were found to be similar in broth and on agar. Extreme Value type II distributions fitted the best the different datasets of lag distributions.

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