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Escherichia coli survival and transfer in estuarine bed sediments
Authors:C. Schang  A. Lintern  P. L. M. Cook  G. Rooney  R. Coleman  H. M. Murphy  A. Deletic  D. McCarthy
Affiliation:1. Environmental and Public Health Microbiology Laboratory (EPHM Lab), Department of Civil Engineering, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia;2. Water Studies Centre, School of Chemistry, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia;3. Melbourne Water Corporation, Docklands, Victoria, Australia;4. Water, Health and Applied Microbiology (WHAM) Lab, College of Public Health, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA;5. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UNSW Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract:Bed sediment resuspension is a potential source of faecal microorganisms in the water column of estuaries. As such, it is important to identify the survival of faecal microorganisms in these bed sediments and understand how bed sediment resuspension impacts the quality of estuarine waters. This study explores the effect of bed sediment resuspension on Escherichia coli concentrations in the water column and the persistence of Ecoli in the water column and bed sediments of the Yarra River estuary in South‐Eastern Australia. Using sediment cores, we identified that the resuspension of both surficial sediments (e.g., by tidal movements) and deeper bed sediments (e.g., by large storm events) can increase Ecoli concentrations in the water column by up to 20 times in estuaries in oceanic climates. Bed sediment resuspension can result in increased Ecoli concentrations in the water column even up to 24 days after Ecoli first enters the estuarine water. This study demonstrates that faecal microorganisms, such as Ecoli, can persist for extended periods in estuarine bed sediments, which may then be re‐entrained into the water column via recreational activities, high flow events, or tidal fluctuations. If the survival and resuspension processes observed here hold true for pathogenic microorganisms, the resuspension of bed sediments may indeed represent an increased public health risk.
Keywords:E.   coli  estuary  faecal contamination  resuspension  sediments  survival
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