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Automated online monitoring of fecal pollution in water by enzymatic methods

Katalin Demeter, Jean‐Baptiste Burnet, Philipp Stadler, Alexander K. T. Kirschner, Matthias Zessner, Andreas H. Farnleitner

2020Current Opinion in Environmental Science & Health17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To facilitate the prompt management of public health risks from water resources, the fluorescence-based detection of the enzymatic activity of β-d-glucuronidase (GLUC) has been suggested as a rapid method to monitor fecal pollution. New technological adaptations enable now its automated, near-real-time measurement in a robust and analytically precise manner. Large data sets of high temporal or spatial resolution have been reported from a variety of freshwater resources, demonstrating the great potential of this automated method. However, the fecal indication capacity of GLUC activity and the potential link to health risk is still unclear, presenting considerable limitations. This review provides a critical evaluation of automated, online GLUC-based methods (and alternatives) and defines open questions to be solved before the method can fully support water management.

Topics & Concepts

PollutionComputer scienceVariety (cybernetics)Water resourcesWater pollutionAutomated methodEnvironmental scienceRisk analysis (engineering)Environmental resource managementWater resource managementBusinessBiologyEcologyArtificial intelligenceBiosensors and Analytical DetectionMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyGut microbiota and health
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