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Concentrations of coprostanol that correspond to existing bacterial indicator guideline limits
Authors:R Leeming  PD Nichols
Affiliation:

CSIRO Division of Oceanography, PO Box 1538, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia

Abstract:Coprostanol is a faecal sterol that has been proposed as an alternative measure of faecal pollution. While the technique has been used successfully to trace sewage-derived organic matter in a range of environments, it has not been embraced for use as a water quality indicator. This is mostly because of a lack of epidemiological evidence relating coprostanol abundance to any health risk. However, there is a valuable reason why the concentration of coprostanol should be related as quantitatively as possible to the abundance of bacterial indicators currently used to measure faecal pollution. The measurement of coprostanol (and concurrently other faecal sterols) offers many diagnostic and quantitative advantages over traditional techniques for detecting human sewage pollution versus faecal contamination from animal sources. Knowing the amount of coprostanol expected given a certain amount of human sewage pollution would provide a measure against which water managers could quantitatively assess faecal pollution as a whole and relate that assessment to variables with which they are more familiar. This study determines the relationships between coprostanol concentrations and indicator bacterial counts and synthesises the results from several environments to propose coprostanol concentrations broadly equivalent to existing bacterial standards. Our data suggest that 60 and 400 ng L−1 of coprostanol correspond to currently defined primary and secondary contact limits for bacteria measured as thermotolerant coliforms (commonly referred to as faecal coliforms) or enterococci.
Keywords:sewage  coprostanol  thermotolerant coliforms  faecal coliforms  enterococci  Clostridium perfringens  water quality  indicators  guidelines
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