No I have the facts correct---
"2.3 Microbial Response to UV Light
The mechanism of disinfection by UV light differs considerably from the mechanisms of
chemical disinfectants such as chlorine and ozone. Chemical disinfectants inactivate
microorganisms by destroying or damaging cellular structures, interfering with metabolism, and
hindering biosynthesis and growth (Snowball and Hornsey 1988).
UV light inactivates
microorganisms by damaging their nucleic acid, thereby preventing them from replicating. A
microorganism that cannot replicate cannot infect a host.
It is important that the assays used to quantify microorganism inactivation measure the
ability of the microorganism to reproduce (Jagger 1967). For bacteria, assays measure the ability
of the microorganism to divide and form colonies. For viruses, assays measure the ability of the
microorganism to form plaques in host cells. For protozoan cysts, the assays measure the ability
of the microorganism to infect a host or tissue culture. Assays that do not measure a response to
reproduction may result in misleading information on the inactivation of microorganisms using
UV light."
http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/disinfection/lt2/pdfs/guide_lt2_uvguidance.pdf
As far as the skimming goes..........it can export bacteria whether it's dead or alive. The part about the UV making skimming more effective has to do with the UV light breaking down organics and making them more available to skim. As I mentioned this is anecdotal.....I have never seen any UV manufacturer claim these as advantages of UV or read of any factual info concerning this.