Universal microbial indicators provide surveillance of sewage contamination in harbours worldwide

Sandra L. McLellan, Anthony Chariton, Annachiara Codello, Jill S. McClary-Gutierrez, Melissa K. Schussman, Ezequiel M. Marzinelli, Judith M. O’Neil, Eric J. Schott, Jennifer L. Bowen, Joe H. Vineis, Lois Maignien, Clarisse Lemonnier, Morgan Perennou, Karen S. Gibb, Guang-Jie Zhou, Kenneth M. Y. Leung, Marek Kirs, John F. Griffith, Joshua A. Steele, Stephen E. Swearer, Allyson L. O’Brien, Dehai Song, Shengkang Liang, Junfeng Li, Laura Airoldi, Francesco P. Mancuso, Paulo S. Salomon, Arthur W. Silva-Lima, Renato C. Pereira, Alexandria B. Boehm, Elton W. X. Lim, Stefan Wuertz, Emilio Fernández, Eva Teira, Ming-Ling Liao, Yun-Wei Dong, Peter D. Steinberg
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Abstract

Human population pressures and activities pose unprecedented challenges to water resources in urban environments. However, standard methods of assessing microbial water quality have relied on the same cultured organisms for decades. We show that there is a conserved microbial assemblage in untreated sewage that can be exploited to improve global sewage surveillance. Among harbour and coastal water samples from 18 cities across 5 continents (n = 442), nearly half had evidence of sewage contamination using two human faecal bacteria as molecular indicators. In contrast, conventional measures using cultured Escherichia coli or enterococci only exceeded water quality limits in ~18% of samples, with less than half of these demonstrating sewage indicators. Contaminated locations also displayed a signature characteristic of microorganisms mainly derived from sewer infrastructure. Given the human health risk, loss of ecosystem services and economic costs associated with contaminated coastal waters, molecular approaches could provide more reliable information on sewage contamination of urban waterways. Assessing microbial water quality is an important approach to monitor potential risks to human and environmental health. The use of two human faecal bacteria as molecular indicators is shown to be more sensitive than conventional measures for detecting contamination on an extensive set of data.

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通用微生物指标可监测全球港口的污水污染情况
人类的人口压力和活动给城市环境中的水资源带来了前所未有的挑战。然而,几十年来,评估微生物水质的标准方法一直依赖于相同的培养生物。我们的研究表明,在未经处理的污水中存在一种保守的微生物组合,可以利用它来改善全球污水监测。在来自五大洲 18 个城市的港口和沿海水样(n = 442)中,有近一半的水样以两种人类粪便细菌作为分子指标,证明受到了污水污染。相比之下,使用培养的大肠杆菌或肠球菌进行常规测量,只有约 18% 的样本水质超标,其中只有不到一半的样本显示出污水指标。受污染地点还显示出主要来自下水道基础设施的微生物特征。鉴于沿岸水域污染对人类健康造成的风险、生态系统服务的损失和经济成本,分子方法可以提供有关城市水道污水污染的更可靠信息。评估微生物水质是监测人类和环境健康潜在风险的重要方法。在大量数据中,使用两种人类粪便细菌作为分子指标,在检测污染方面比传统方法更灵敏。
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