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Relationship between Rainfall, Fecal Pollution, Antimicrobial Resistance, and Microbial Diversity in an Urbanized Subtropical Bay

Nicole C. Powers, Hailey R. Wallgren, Sandra Marbach, Jeffrey W. Turner

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The presence of human enteric pathogens, stemming from fecal pollution, is a serious environmental and public health concern in recreational waters. Accurate assessments of fecal pollution are therefore needed to properly assess exposure risks and guide water quality policies and practices. In this study, the absence of a direct correlation between enterococci and source-specific human and animal markers disputes the utility of enterococci as an indicator of fecal pollution in urbanized subtropical bays. Moreover, the inverse correlation between enterococci and the human-specific marker HF183 indicates that recreational beach advisories, triggered by elevated enterococcus concentrations, are a misleading practice. This study clearly demonstrates that a multiparameter approach that includes the quantitation of host-specific markers, as well as analyses of microbial diversity, is a more effective means of assessing water quality in urbanized subtropical bays.

Topics & Concepts

BaySubtropicsFecal coliformPollutionEnvironmental scienceFecesAntibiotic resistanceBiologyEcologyGeographyMicrobiologyAntibioticsWater qualityArchaeologyChild Nutrition and Water AccessFecal contamination and water qualityVibrio bacteria research studies