Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?

Low-frequency electromagnetic fields (LF-EMF) may present an alternative to conventional sanitation methods of water supply lines in animal production. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of the application of LF-EMF on bacterial concentrations and biofilms at scale-models of diff...

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Main Authors: Rafael H Mateus-Vargas, Nicole Kemper, Nina Volkmann, Manfred Kietzmann, Jessica Meissner, Jochen Schulz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220302
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spelling doaj-ef70e44c63064f4aa6a5160ef6f09bd92021-03-03T21:19:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01147e022030210.1371/journal.pone.0220302Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?Rafael H Mateus-VargasNicole KemperNina VolkmannManfred KietzmannJessica MeissnerJochen SchulzLow-frequency electromagnetic fields (LF-EMF) may present an alternative to conventional sanitation methods of water supply lines in animal production. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of the application of LF-EMF on bacterial concentrations and biofilms at scale-models of different drinking systems (circulating and non-circulating) conventionally used in poultry holdings. Treated systems were equipped with commercial devices producing pulsed electromagnetic signals of low frequency up to 10,000 Hz; max. 21 mT. Exposure of water to LF-EMF resulted in changes of the culturable bacterial counts, although with high standard deviations. Differing between systems types, LF-EMF treatment seemed to be responsible either for a limitation or for an increase of colony forming unit counts, with partly statistically significant differences, especially in early stages of treatment. In contrast, neither biofilm formation nor counts of cells suspended in water differed between treated and control lines over 28 days of experiment, as determined by fluorescence microscopy. Although this study indicates that LF-EMF may influence culturability of water microorganisms, no clear inhibitory effects on bacterial biofilm formation or on planktonic microbes by LF-EMF treatment were confirmed in the experiments.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220302
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rafael H Mateus-Vargas
Nicole Kemper
Nina Volkmann
Manfred Kietzmann
Jessica Meissner
Jochen Schulz
spellingShingle Rafael H Mateus-Vargas
Nicole Kemper
Nina Volkmann
Manfred Kietzmann
Jessica Meissner
Jochen Schulz
Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rafael H Mateus-Vargas
Nicole Kemper
Nina Volkmann
Manfred Kietzmann
Jessica Meissner
Jochen Schulz
author_sort Rafael H Mateus-Vargas
title Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?
title_short Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?
title_full Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?
title_fullStr Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?
title_full_unstemmed Low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?
title_sort low-frequency electromagnetic fields as an alternative to sanitize water of drinking systems in poultry production?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Low-frequency electromagnetic fields (LF-EMF) may present an alternative to conventional sanitation methods of water supply lines in animal production. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of the application of LF-EMF on bacterial concentrations and biofilms at scale-models of different drinking systems (circulating and non-circulating) conventionally used in poultry holdings. Treated systems were equipped with commercial devices producing pulsed electromagnetic signals of low frequency up to 10,000 Hz; max. 21 mT. Exposure of water to LF-EMF resulted in changes of the culturable bacterial counts, although with high standard deviations. Differing between systems types, LF-EMF treatment seemed to be responsible either for a limitation or for an increase of colony forming unit counts, with partly statistically significant differences, especially in early stages of treatment. In contrast, neither biofilm formation nor counts of cells suspended in water differed between treated and control lines over 28 days of experiment, as determined by fluorescence microscopy. Although this study indicates that LF-EMF may influence culturability of water microorganisms, no clear inhibitory effects on bacterial biofilm formation or on planktonic microbes by LF-EMF treatment were confirmed in the experiments.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220302
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