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Distribution and potential significance of a gull fecal marker in urban coastal and riverine areas of southern Ontario, Canada
Authors:Lu Jingrang  Ryu Hodon  Hill Stephen  Schoen Mary  Ashbolt Nicholas  Edge Thomas A  Domingo Jorge Santo
Affiliation:a Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 26 W. MLK Dr., Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA
b National Water Research Institute, Environment Canada, Burlington L7R 4A6, Canada
Abstract:To better understand the distribution of gull fecal contamination in urban areas of southern Ontario, we used gull-specific PCR and qPCR assays against 1309 water samples collected from 15 urban coastal and riverine locations during 2007. Approximately, 58% of the water samples tested positive for the gull-assay. Locations observed to have higher numbers of gulls and their fecal droppings had a higher frequency of occurrence of the gull marker and a higher gull marker qPCR signal than areas observed to be less impacted by gulls. Lower gull marker occurrence and lower qPCR signals were associated with municipal wastewater (7.4%) and urban stormwater effluents (29.5%). Overall, there were no statistically significant differences in gull marker occurrence at beach sites for pore water, ankle, and chest-depth samples, although signals were generally higher in interstitial beach sand pore water and ankle-depth water than in chest-depth water samples. Overall, the results indicated that gull fecal pollution is widespread in urban coastal and riverine areas in southern Ontario and that it significantly contributes to fecal indicator bacterial loads.
Keywords:Microbial source tracking  Gull-targeted fecal assay  Fecal contamination  Lake Ontario
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