AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate change is straining freshwater resources, necessitating the search for safe, alternative water sources for irrigation of fresh produce.
  • A 26-month study analyzed bacterial contamination levels in water from various sites (like creeks, tidal rivers, and ponds) to assess their safety for irrigation, with many samples showing high levels of total coliforms and enterococci.
  • Only a few sites met food safety standards, but implementing recommended measures could enable all tested water sources to safely be used for irrigation within 2 days, highlighting the importance of this research for food safety and agricultural practices.

Article Abstract

As climate change continues to stress freshwater resources, we have a pressing need to identify alternative (nontraditional) sources of microbially safe water for irrigation of fresh produce. This study is part of the center CONSERVE, which aims to facilitate the adoption of adequate agricultural water sources. A 26-month longitudinal study was conducted at 11 sites to assess the prevalence of bacteria indicating water quality, fecal contamination, and crop contamination risk (, total coliforms [TC], , and ). Sites included nontidal freshwater rivers/creeks (NF), a tidal brackish river (TB), irrigation ponds (PW), and reclaimed water sites (RW). Water samples were filtered for bacterial quantification. , TC, enterococci (∼86%, 98%, and 90% positive, respectively;  = 333), and (∼98% positive;  = 133) were widespread in water samples tested. Highest counts were in rivers, TC counts in TB, and enterococci in rivers and ponds (0.001 in all cases) compared to other water types. counts were consistent across sites. Seasonal dynamics were detected in NF and PW samples only. counts were higher in the vegetable crop-growing (May-October) than nongrowing (November-April) season in all water types (0.05). Only one RW and both PW sites met the U.S. Food Safety Modernization Act water standards. However, implementation of recommended mitigation measures of allowing time for microbial die-off between irrigation and harvest would bring all other sites into compliance within 2 days. This study provides comprehensive microbial data on alternative irrigation water and serves as an important resource for food safety planning and policy setting. Increasing demands for fresh fruit and vegetables, a variable climate affecting agricultural water availability, and microbial food safety goals are pressing the need to identify new, safe, alternative sources of irrigation water. Our study generated microbial data collected over a 2-year period from potential sources of irrigation (rivers, ponds, and reclaimed water sites). Pond water was found to comply with Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) microbial standards for irrigation of fruit and vegetables. Bacterial counts in reclaimed water, a resource that is not universally allowed on fresh produce in the United States, generally met microbial standards or needed minimal mitigation. We detected the most seasonality and the highest microbial loads in river water, which emerged as the water type that would require the most mitigation to be compliant with established FSMA standards. This data set represents one of the most comprehensive, longitudinal analyses of alternative irrigation water sources in the United States.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7531960PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00342-20DOI Listing

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