惠灵溪流域大肠杆菌趋势分析

E. Huff, J. Wood
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摘要

大肠杆菌(E. coli)是一种存在于温血动物肠道内的肠道细菌,通过粪便污染水体。在高浓度的情况下,一些菌株如果被个人摄入会导致严重的疾病。高浓度的大肠杆菌也可能表明存在其他潜在的有害病原体。地表水可以通过农业用地和居住水禽种群的非点源径流和点源污染,包括泄漏的污水基础设施和联合下水道溢流(cso)。在淡水中,大肠杆菌可以自由漂浮在整个水柱上或附着在河床沉积物上,当这些沉积物因降水而重新悬浮时,大肠杆菌在水柱中的浓度会增加。美国环境保护署将休闲水域的最高安全限值设定为单个样本235 CFU/100毫升水,30天内五个样本的平均值为126 CFU/100毫升。我们选择了17个采样点来监测和确定西弗吉尼亚州北部长柄地带惠灵溪流域大肠杆菌的趋势和预测因素。我们测量了现场水温、pH值、溶解氧、电导率、氯化物和浊度,并使用IDEXX系统进行大肠杆菌定量。我们的结果表明,51%的样品(245个样品中的125个)超过了单样品安全限度(235 CFU/100ml)。大肠杆菌浓度随着城市的发展而增加,并与浊度呈正相关,这可能表明人类是惠灵溪大肠杆菌的主要来源。
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Analysis of E. coli trends in the Wheeling Creek watershed
Escherichia coli (E. coli) is a gut bacterium found in intestinal tracts of warm-blooded animals and pollutes water bodies through fecal contamination. At high concentrations some strains can cause serious illnesses if ingested by individuals. High concentrations of E. coli can also indicate the presence of other potentially harmful pathogens. Surface waters can become contaminated via nonpoint sources of runoff from agricultural lands and resident waterfowl population and point sources including leaking sewage infrastructure and combined sewer overflows (CSOs). In freshwaters E. coli can live free floating throughout the water column or attached to streambed sediments, and when these sediments are resuspended due to precipitation E. coli concentrations increase in the water column. The USEPA has set a maximum safe limit for recreational waters at 235 CFU/100 mL of water for a single sample and a 30-day five-sample mean of 126 CFU/100 mL. We chose seventeen sampling sites to monitor and identify trends and predictors of E. coli in Wheeling Creek watershed, in the northern panhandle of West Virginia. We measured water temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, chloride, and turbidity in the field and used an IDEXX system for E. coli quantification. Our results indicate that 51% of samples (125 out of 245) have exceeded that single sample safe limit (235 CFU/100ml). Escherichia coli concentrations are increasing with increasing urban development and show a positive correlation with turbidity, this could suggest that humans are the primary source of E. coli in Wheeling Creek.
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