AI Article Synopsis

  • During extreme rainfall, untreated sewage from combined sewer overflows (CSO) directly contaminates rivers, impacting water quality and microbial communities.
  • A study analyzed changes in water quality, bacterial structures, and microbial functions before and after the construction of a stormwater storage pipe, revealing that CSOs significantly alter microbial functions and community structures.
  • The research suggests that implementing stormwater storage pipes can reduce the acute microbial disturbances caused by CSOs, thus improving waterway management in urban environments.

Article Abstract

When the wastewater volume exceeds the sewer pipe capacity during extreme rainfall events, untreated sewage discharges directly into rivers as combined sewer overflow (CSO). To compare the impacts of CSOs and stormwater on urban waterways, we assessed physicochemical water quality, the 16S rRNA gene-based bacterial community structure, and EcoPlate-based microbial functions during rainfall periods in an urban waterway before and after a stormwater storage pipe was commissioned. A temporal variation analysis showed that CSOs have significant impacts on microbial function and bacterial community structure, while their contributions to physicochemical parameters, bacterial abundance, and chlorophyll a were not confirmed. Heat map analysis showed that the impact of CSO on the waterway bacterial community structure was temporal and the bacterial community composition in CSO is distinct from that in sewers. Hierarchical clustering analysis revealed that the waterway physicochemical water qualities, bacterial community composition, and microbial community function were distinguishable from the upper reach of the river, rather than between CSO and stormwater. Changes in the relative abundance of tetracycline resistance () genes-especially (M)-were observed after CSOs but did not coincide with changes in the microbial community composition, suggesting that the parameters affecting the microbial community composition and relative abundance of genes differ. After pipe implementation, however, stormwater did not contribute to the abundance of genes in the waterway. These results indicate that CSO-induced acute microbial disturbances in the urban waterway were alleviated by the implementation of a stormwater storage pipe and will support the efficiency of storage pipe operation for waterway management in urban areas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9840855PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14684DOI Listing

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