Abstract

Using a Casella High Volume Airborne Bacteria Sampler, the soft rot coliform bacteria Erwinia carotovora var. carotovora and E. carotovora var. atroseptica were caught from the open air during rainfall in mid to late summer, autumn and early winter, but not in late winter, spring or early summer. They were not found every time it rained, and never when the weather was dry. The bacteria were caught close to potato crops, but there were several occasions when they were found at sites where there were no such crops or at times of year after potato crops had been harvested. The sources of the organisms are uncertain, but those obtained close to potato crops may have originated there. The results are considered to provide further evidence that airborne spread and subsequent deposition of viable bacteria could cause contamination of Erwinia‐free potato stocks, and suggest that rainfall is a major generator of the general atmospheric bacterial aerosol.

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