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Probabilistic fecal pollution source profiling and microbial source tracking for an urban river catchment

Authors :
Julia Derx
H. Seda Kılıç
Rita Linke
Sílvia Cervero-Aragó
Christina Frick
Jack Schijven
Alexander K.T. Kirschner
Gerhard Lindner
Julia Walochnik
Gabrielle Stalder
Regina Sommer
Ernis Saracevic
Matthias Zessner
Alfred P. Blaschke
Andreas H. Farnleitner
Source :
Science of The Total Environment. 857:159533
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

We developed an innovative approach to estimate the extent of fecal pollution sources for urban river catchments. The methodology consists of 1) catchment surveys complemented by literature data where needed for probabilistic estimates of daily produced fecal indicator (FIBs, E. coli, enterococci) and zoonotic reference pathogen numbers (Campylobacter, Cryptosporidium and Giardia) excreted by human and animal sources in a river catchment, 2) generating a hypothesis about the dominant sources of fecal pollution and selecting a source targeted monitoring design, and 3) verifying the results by comparing measured concentrations of chemical tracers, C. perfringens, and host-associated genetic microbial source tracking (MST) markers in the river, and by multi-parametric correlation analysis. We tested the approach at a study area in Vienna, Austria. The daily produced microbial particle numbers according to the probabilistic estimates indicated that, for the dry weather scenario, the discharge of treated wastewater (WWTP) was the primary contributor to fecal pollution. For the wet weather scenario, 80-99 % of the daily produced FIBs and pathogens resulted from combined sewer overflows (CSOs) according to the probabilistic estimates. When testing our hypothesis in the river, the measured concentrations of the human genetic fecal marker were log10 4 higher than for selected animal genetic fecal markers. Our analyses showed for the first-time statistical relationships between C. perfringens and a human genetic fecal marker (i.e. HF183/BacR287) with the reference pathogen Giardia in river water (Spearman rank correlation: 0.78-0.83, p

Details

ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
857
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science of The Total Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....88e178a9ebe6185394c4a01e27a866dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159533