Research Article

Influence of Tillage and Daily Manure Application on the Survival of Bacterial Pathogens Indicators in Soil and on Radish

Table 1

Escherichia coli and Enterococcus sp. mean numbers in the 0–5 cm of soil after application of inorganic fertilizer (control) and solid dairy manure and chisel or disc tillage.

Dairy wasteTillageDay 1Day 7Day 28Day 54Day 84
E. coliEnterococcus E. coliEnterococcus E. coliEnterococcus E. coliEnterococcus E. coli Enterococcus
colony forming units/g-1 dry weight of soil

ControlChisel0 d w73 c0 d w1 e w0 d w0 d w0 d w2 d0 b w55 d
ControlRoller0 d w2 d w1 d w5 e w0 d w0 d w0 d w1 d w0 b w52 d w
LowChisel122 b x82 c x711 a w550 c w12 b y78 b x72 b x217 b wx0 b z401 b w
LowRoller2284 a w255 b y724 a x862 b y2 c z40 b y2 c z73 c y0 b z103 c y
HighChisel153 b y320 a y113 b w4133 a x35 a y7732 a w4 c z56 c y0 b z73 d y
HighRoller2 c z224 b y32 c y136 d y8 b z10 c z223 a y1398 a x12 a z3573 a w

(a) In each column, values followed by the same letter (a,b, c, d, or e) are not significantly different as determined by the least square means test ( ; ). (b) In each row, within each Escherichia coli and Enterococcus sp. population, values followed by the same letter (w, x, y, or z) are not significantly different as determined by the least square means test. ( ; ). (c) Escherichia coli and Enterococcus sp. populations were transformed using logarithms to achieve normal distributions; Escherichia coli and Enterococcus sp. populations are reported in untransformed numbers.