Litcius/Paper detail

Bacteria communities and water quality parameters in riverine water and sediments near wastewater discharges

Carolina Oliveira de Santana, Pieter Spealman, Daniella Azulai, Mary E. Reid, M. Elias Dueker, Gabriel G. Perron

2022Scientific Data14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) discharges alter water quality and microbial communities by introducing human-associated bacteria in the environment and by altering microbial communities. To fully understand this impact, it is crucial to study whether WWTP discharges affect water and sediments microbial communities in comparable ways and whether such effects depend on specific environmental variables. Here, we present a dataset investigating the impact of a WWTP on water quality and bacterial communities by comparing samples collected directly from the WWTP outflow to surface waters and sediments at two sites above and two sites below it over a period of five months. When possible, we measured five physicochemical variables (e.g., temperature, turbidity, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, and salinity), four bioindicators (e.g., Escherichia coli, total coliforms, Enterococcus sp., and endotoxins), and two molecular indicators (e.g., intI1's relative abundance, and 16S rRNA gene profiling). Preliminary results suggest that bioindicators correlate with environmental variables and that bacterial communities present in the water tables, sediments, and treated water differ greatly in composition and structure.

Topics & Concepts

BioindicatorSalinityWater qualityEnvironmental scienceTurbidityWastewaterEnvironmental chemistryRelative species abundanceSurface waterSewage treatmentWetlandEcologyBiologyAbundance (ecology)Environmental engineeringChemistryMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyWastewater Treatment and Nitrogen RemovalWater Treatment and Disinfection