| Literature DB >> 25397595 |
Tracy L Perkins1, Katie Clements2, Jaco H Baas2, Colin F Jago2, Davey L Jones3, Shelagh K Malham4, James E McDonald1.
Abstract
Faecal contamination of estuarine and coastal waters can pose a risk to human health, particularly in areas used for shellfish production or recreation. Routine microbiological water quality testing highlights areas of faecal indicator bacteria (FIB) contamination within the water column, but fails to consider the abundance of FIB in sediments, which under certain hydrodynamic conditions can become resuspended. Sediments can enhance the survival of FIB in estuarine environments, but the influence of sediment composition on the ecology and abundance of FIB is poorly understood. To determine the relationship between sediment composition (grain size and organic matter) and the abundance of pathogen indicator bacteria (PIB), sediments were collected from four transverse transects of the Conwy estuary, UK. The abundance of culturable Escherichia coli, total coliforms, enterococci, Campylobacter, Salmonella and Vibrio spp. in sediments was determined in relation to sediment grain size, organic matter content, salinity, depth and temperature. Sediments that contained higher proportions of silt and/or clay and associated organic matter content showed significant positive correlations with the abundance of PIB. Furthermore, the abundance of each bacterial group was positively correlated with the presence of all other groups enumerated. Campylobacter spp. were not isolated from estuarine sediments. Comparisons of the number of culturable E. coli, total coliforms and Vibrio spp. in sediments and the water column revealed that their abundance was 281, 433 and 58-fold greater in sediments (colony forming units (CFU)/100g) when compared with the water column (CFU/100ml), respectively. These data provide important insights into sediment compositions that promote the abundance of PIB in estuarine environments, with important implications for the modelling and prediction of public health risk based on sediment resuspension and transport.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25397595 PMCID: PMC4232572 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1A map of the study site; the Conwy Estuary, North Wales, UK.
Water and sediment samples were collected in triplicate from four transverse transects of the Conwy estuary (twenty one sampling sites).
Average abundance of culturable pathogen indicator bacteria in sediment (CFU/100 g wet weight) and water (CFU/100ml) across 21 estuarine sample sites.
| Bacterial group | Sediment | Water | Fold - difference |
|
| 5.9×103 | 2.1×101 | 281 |
| Total coliforms | 1.3 x105 | 3.0×102 | 433 |
|
| 4.5×105 | 7.8×103 | 58 |
Figure 2Bacterial abundance (CFU/100 g wet weight) compared to sediment grain size, organic matter content in sediments and bacterial abundance in the water column (CFU/100 ml), across four transverse transects.
(A) Transect 1, (B) Transect 2, (C) Transect 3, (D) Transect 4. The X-axis represents sample points (n = 3 replicate samples for A, B, C and D except for sediment samples site 13, n = 2), mean values are plotted and error bars represent the SEM).