Classification of the spoilage flora of raw and pasteurized bovine milk, with special reference to Pseudomonas and Bacillus

Abstract
Eighty-one bacterial strains isolated from refrigerated raw milk, 124 from pasteurized milk and cream stored at 5 degrees C and 7 degrees C, and 19 type and reference strains of Pseudomonas spp. and Bacillus spp. were characterized by numerical phenotypic analysis. Data were processed with simple matching (SSM) and Jaccard (SJ) coefficients, and UPGMA clustering. Fourteen clusters of Gram-negative bacteria were formed at SJ = 79% (SSM = 90%). Raw milk was exclusively spoilt by Gram-negative bacteria, the majority of which were Pseudomonas fluorescens biovar I, Ps. fragi, Ps. lundensis and Ps. fluorescens biovar III. Minor groups in raw milk included Enterobacteriaceae spp. and Acinetobacter spp. Pasteurized milk was spoilt by essentially the same Gram-negative organisms in 65% (5 degrees C) and 50% (7 degrees C) of the cases. The phenotypic characteristics of Gram-negative bacteria are given. Bacillus polymyxa (both temperatures) and B. cereus (only at 7 degrees C) were responsible for 77% of samples spoiled by the Gram-positive organisms. Minor milk spoilage groups included other Bacillus spp. and lactic acid bacteria. All Bacillus spp. grew fermentatively in milk, and most strains denitrified. It is suggested that: (i) industrial recontamination tests of pasteurized milk are directed against Pseudomonas; (ii) milk is stored at 5 degrees C or lower to avoid growth of B. cereus; and (iii) the significance of gas-producing and nitrate/nitrite-reducing Bacillus strains is recognized in cheese production.