Search
×
FR

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

ISO 9185:2025 Protective clothing — Assessment of resistance of materials to molten metal splash

$

186

BUY NOW

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

ISO 13165-4:2025 Water quality — Radium-226 — Part 4: Test method using alpha spectrometry

$

296

BUY NOW

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

ISO 23308-1:2025 Energy efficiency of industrial trucks — Test methods — Part 1: General

$

251

BUY NOW

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

ISO 11265:2025 Environmental solid matrices — Determination of the specific electrical conductivity

$

125

BUY NOW

ISO 7899-3:2025

ISO 7899-3:2025 Water quality — Enumeration of intestinal enterococci — Part 3: Most probable number method

CDN $125.00

This publication was last reviewed and confirmed in 2025.

Water quality — Enumeration of intestinal enterococci — Part 3: Most probable number method

Description

This document specifies a method for the enumeration of intestinal enterococci in water, including Enterococcus faecalis, Enterococcus faecium, Enterococcus durans, Enterococcus avium, Enterococcus gallinarum, Enterococcus hirae, Enterococcus casselifavus. The method is based on the growth of target organisms in a liquid medium and calculation of the “most probable number” (MPN) of microorganisms by reference to MPN tables or using suitable MPN informatic programs.

This method can be applied to drinking water and bathing water (fresh or marine), together with other similar water types including those containing an appreciable amount of suspended matter, and allows the detection of enterococci at 1 colony-forming unit (CFU) per 100 ml with definitive results within (26 ± 2) h in the presence of heterotrophic bacteria in numbers as high as 1 × 106 per 100 ml of sample.

For bathing waters, fresh and marine, enterococci are best enumerated when samples are diluted 1:10.

The test specified in this document relies upon the detection of intestinal enterococci based upon expression of the enzyme ß-D-glucosidase and provides a confirmed result in 24 h without further testing of positive wells.

This document does not apply to bottled waters, for which the method has not been validated and therefore is outside the scope of this document, unless appropriate validation of performance of this method has been undertaken by the laboratory prior to use.

Edition

1

Published Date

2026-06-18

Status

PUBLISHED

Pages

10

Language Detail Icon

English

Format Secure Icon

Secure PDF

Abstract

This document specifies a method for the enumeration of intestinal enterococci in water, including Enterococcus faecalis, Enterococcus faecium, Enterococcus durans, Enterococcus avium, Enterococcus gallinarum, Enterococcus hirae, Enterococcus casselifavus. The method is based on the growth of target organisms in a liquid medium and calculation of the “most probable number” (MPN) of microorganisms by reference to MPN tables or using suitable MPN informatic programs.

This method can be applied to drinking water and bathing water (fresh or marine), together with other similar water types including those containing an appreciable amount of suspended matter, and allows the detection of enterococci at 1 colony-forming unit (CFU) per 100 ml with definitive results within (26 ± 2) h in the presence of heterotrophic bacteria in numbers as high as 1 × 106 per 100 ml of sample.

For bathing waters, fresh and marine, enterococci are best enumerated when samples are diluted 1:10.

The test specified in this document relies upon the detection of intestinal enterococci based upon expression of the enzyme ß-D-glucosidase and provides a confirmed result in 24 h without further testing of positive wells.

This document does not apply to bottled waters, for which the method has not been validated and therefore is outside the scope of this document, unless appropriate validation of performance of this method has been undertaken by the laboratory prior to use.

Previous Editions

Can’t find what you are looking for?

Please contact us at: