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  5. crAssphage as human molecular marker to evaluate temporal and spatial variability in faecal contamination of urban marine bathing waters
 
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crAssphage as human molecular marker to evaluate temporal and spatial variability in faecal contamination of urban marine bathing waters

Author(s)
Sala-Comorera, Laura  
Reynolds, Liam J.  
Martin, Niamh A.  
Pascual-Benito, Miriam  
Stephens, Jayne H.  
Nolan, Tristan M.  
Gitto, Aurora  
O'Hare, G. M. P. (Greg M. P.)  
O'Sullivan, J. J.  
García-Aljaro, Cristina  
Meijer, Wim  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/27057
Date Issued
2021-10-01
Date Available
2024-11-05T16:33:56Z
Abstract
Bathing water quality may be negatively impacted by diffuse pollution arising from urban and agricultural activities and wildlife, it is therefore important to be able to differentiate between biological and geographical sources of faecal pollution. crAssphage was recently described as a novel human-associated microbial source tracking marker. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of the crAssphage marker in designated bathing waters. The sensitivity and specificity of the crAss_2 marker was evaluated using faecal samples from herring gulls, dogs, sewage and a stream impacted by human pollution (n = 80), which showed that all human impacted samples tested positive for the marker while none of the animal samples did. The crAss_2 marker was field tested in an urban marine bathing water close to the discharge point of human impacted streams. In addition, the bathing water is affected by dog and gull fouling. Analysis of water samples taken at the compliance point every 30 min during a tidal cycle following a rain event showed that the crAss_2 and HF183 markers performed equally well (Spearman correlation ρ = 0.84). The levels of these marker and faecal indicators (Escherichia coli, intestinal enterococci, somatic coliphages) varied by up to 2.5 log10 during the day. Analysis of a high-tide transect perpendicular to the shoreline revealed high levels of localised faecal contamination 1 km offshore, with a concomitant spike in the gull marker. In contrast, both the crAss_2 and HF183 markers remained at a constant level, showing that human faecal contamination is homogenously distributed, while gull pollution is localised. Performance of the crAss_2 and HF183 assay was further evaluated in bimonthly compliance point samples over an 18-month period. The co-occurrence between the crAss_2 and HF183 markers in compliance sampling was 76%. A combination of both markers should be applied in low pollution impacted environments to obtain a high confidence level.
Sponsorship
European Commission - European Regional Development Fund
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Elsevier
Journal
The Science of The Total Environment
Volume
789
Copyright (Published Version)
2021 the Authors
Subjects

crAssphage

Bathing waters

Faecal pollution

Microbial source trac...

HF183

DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147828
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0048-9697
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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STOTEN Published.pdf

Size

1.37 MB

Format

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Checksum (MD5)

fb1d56099ea16414d7a7a08975b35775

Owning collection
Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Research Collection
Mapped collections
Centre for Water Resources Research Collection•
Civil Engineering Research Collection•
Conway Institute Research Collection•
Earth Institute Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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