| Literature DB >> 32958794 |
James P R Sorensen1,2, Andrew F Carr3, Jacintha Nayebare4, Djim M L Diongue5, Abdoulaye Pouye5, Raphaëlle Roffo3, Gloria Gwengweya6, Jade S T Ward7,8, Japhet Kanoti9, Joseph Okotto-Okotto10, Laura van der Marel3, Lena Ciric11, Seynabou C Faye5, Cheikh B Gaye5, Timothy Goodall12, Robinah Kulabako13, Daniel J Lapworth14, Alan M MacDonald15, Maurice Monjerezi6, Daniel Olago9, Michael Owor4, Daniel S Read12, Richard G Taylor3.
Abstract
Fluorescent natural organic matter at tryptophan-like (TLF) and humic-like fluorescence (HLF) peaks is associated with the presence and enumeration of faecal indicator bacteria in groundwater. We hypothesise, however, that it is predominantly extracellular material that fluoresces at these wavelengths, not bacterial cells. We quantified total (unfiltered) and extracellular (filtered at < 0.22 µm) TLF and HLF in 140 groundwater sources across a range of urban population densities in Kenya, Malawi, Senegal, and Uganda. Where changes in fluorescence occurred following filtration they were correlated with potential controlling variables. A significant reduction in TLF following filtration (ΔTLF) was observed across the entire dataset, although the majority of the signal remained and thus considered extracellular (median 96.9%). ΔTLF was only significant in more urbanised study areas where TLF was greatest. Beneath Dakar, Senegal, ΔTLF was significantly correlated to total bacterial cells (ρs 0.51). No significant change in HLF following filtration across all data indicates these fluorophores are extracellular. Our results suggest that TLF and HLF are more mobile than faecal indicator bacteria and larger pathogens in groundwater, as the predominantly extracellular fluorophores are less prone to straining. Consequently, TLF/HLF are more precautionary indicators of microbial risks than faecal indicator bacteria in groundwater-derived drinking water.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32958794 PMCID: PMC7505957 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-72258-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Study site locations in Africa. Continental map
modified from https://online.seterra.com/pdf/africa-countries.pdf.
Figure 2Boxplots of (a) unfiltered TLF, (b) unfiltered HLF, (c) temperature and (d) turbidity across D = large city of Dakar, K = medium-sized city of Kisumu, L = small town of Lukaya, and L&B = rural Lilongwe & Balaka Districts.
Figure 3Change in TLF following filtration in (a) QSU and (b) as a percentage. Dotted lines in (a) denote error in repeatability and (b) is a reference zero line.
Figure 4Comparative boxplots of unfiltered (UF) and filtered (F) TLF data for each study area. Displayed p values are the results of paired Wilcoxon signed rank tests.
Figure 5Change in HLF following filtration in (a) QSU and (b) as a percentage. Dotted lines in (a) denote error in repeatability and (b) is a reference zero line.
Figure 6Correlation matrix between four independent variables and TLF change following filtration in each of the four countries. Displayed values are Spearman’s ρ and ** denotes a p value of 0.01.