AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed sewage contamination variances across different times and locations within a watershed upstream of a water reclamation facility in Milwaukee, focusing on the presence of human-associated indicator bacteria and viruses.
  • Over a two-year period, researchers used an automated water sampler to collect large volumes of water to measure the occurrence of human-specific viruses and indicator bacteria at six stream locations in the Menomonee River watershed.
  • Findings revealed that while human-specific viruses were detected less frequently than indicator bacteria, their distribution varied significantly, highlighting the complexity of how different indicators of fecal contamination can behave in a watershed environment.

Article Abstract

Hydrologic, seasonal, and spatial variability of sewage contamination was studied at six locations within a watershed upstream from water reclamation facility (WRF) effluent to define relative loadings of sewage from different portions of the watershed. Fecal pollution from human sources was spatially quantified by measuring two human-associated indicator bacteria (HIB) and eight human-specific viruses (HSV) at six stream locations in the Menomonee River watershed in Milwaukee, Wisconsin from April 2009 to March 2011. A custom, automated water sampler, which included HSV filtration, was deployed at each location and provided unattended, flow-weighted, large-volume (30-913 L) sampling. In addition, wastewater influent samples were composited over discrete 7 day periods from the two Milwaukee WRFs. Of the 8 HSV, only 3 were detected, present in up to 38% of the 228 stream samples, while at least 1 HSV was detected in all WRF influent samples. HIB occurred more often with significantly higher concentrations than the HSV in stream and WRF influent samples ( p < 0.05). HSV yield calculations showed a loss from upstream to the most-downstream sub-watershed of the Menomonee River, and in contrast, a positive HIB yield from this same sub-watershed emphasizes the complexity in fate and transport properties between HSV and HIB. This study demonstrates the utility of analyzing multiple HSV and HIB to provide a weight-of-evidence approach for assessment of fecal contamination at the watershed level, provides an assessment of relative loadings for prioritizing areas within a watershed, and demonstrates how loadings of HSV and HIB can be inconsistent, inferring potential differences in fate and transport between the two indicators of human fecal presence.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b03481DOI Listing

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