The effect of drinking water treatment ( ferric coagulation, floe blanket clarification, rapid sand filtration) on the spatial heterogeneity of five species of micro-organism was studied at pilot scale. It was found that the spatial heteroaeneity of vegetative bacteria (namely total coliform and heterotrophic (122degreesC: 3 d) bacteria) was little affected by treatment. Indeed, counts of total coliform bacteria within 5001 volumes of treated water were Poisson distributed (i.e. showed minimum variation). In contrast, treatment appeared to increase the spatial heterogeneity (or clustering) of both aerobic spores indigenous to the raw water and Bacillus subtilis var niger spores added to the raw water. Furthermore, B. subtilis var niger spores added to the raw water were detected in the treated water 25 h after termination of spiking to the raw water. The effect on C. parrum oocysts added to the raw water could not be determined because few oocysts broke through treatment into the treated water. Indeed oocyst removals of 5-6 logs were apparent. "Species-specific" differences in the removal ratios were also demonstrated. It is concluded that audits for treatment processes based on single 100 ml "spot" samples for spores will tend to over-estimate the net spore removal and hence underestimate the public health risk. Spatial heterogeneity of counts in treated water contributes to explaining why no "ideal" surrogate has been identified for treatment plant performance. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.