Escherichia Coli (E. coli) is a bacterium present in very high numbers in human and animal feces. The presence of E. coli in water indicates recent fecal contamination of water supplies and may indicate the possible presence of other disease-causing pathogens.
For this reason, E. coli is an indicator organism or reference pathogen for the presence of pathogenic bacteria in water. Many systems are designed around achieving 3 log reductions or greater of E. coli with the expectation that if E. coli is controlled, other pathogenic bacteria is as well.
The EPA Standard for Microbiological Water Purifiers & the associated NSF standards for Class A UV microbiological treatment systems require a minimum 6 log reduction/inactivation of E. coli.