Abstract

Yersinia enterocolitica and Y. enterocolitica-like bacteria were frequently isolated from samples of both raw bulked milk (34/150) and farm bottled (raw) milk (5/20). These bacteria were also found to contaminate creamery pasteurized milk (6/100 samples) and farm pasteurized milk (4/50 samples). Although Y. enterocolitica was the most commonly isolated species, Y. intermedia and Y. frederiksenii were also frequently obtained (52, 31 and 15% of isolates, respectively). Also, one atypical strain was identified as Y. aldovae. The Y. enterocolitica strains were largely biotype 1 (20/27) including five strains which could ferment lactose. One third of the Y. enterocolitica strains were not typable, but of those which were, the serotypes were 0:34 (18.5%), 0:5.27 (18.5%), 0:6.3 (15%), 0:4 (11%) and 0:7 (4%). Pre-enrichment in trypticase-soy broth (TSB) (at 22 degrees C for 24 h) followed by selective enrichment in bile-oxalate-sorbose broth (at 22 degrees C for 6 d) allowed the recovery of 92.3% of all isolates, as compared with 15.4% using cold enrichment in TSB at 4 degrees C for 21 d.

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