4.6 Article

Biotin- and Glycoprotein-Coated Microspheres as Surrogates for Studying Filtration Removal of Cryptosporidium parvum in a Granular Limestone Aquifer Medium

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 13, Pages 4277-4283

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00885-15

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) as part of (Vienna Doctoral Program on Water Resource Systems) [DK-Plus 1219-N22]
  2. project Groundwater Resource Systems Vienna (GWRS-Vienna) - Vienna Waterworks
  3. Government of Austria (Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Environment & Water Management)
  4. Government of Vienna
  5. European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development [LE 07-13]
  6. EU [311 846]
  7. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country flagship program (Australia)

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Members of the genus Cryptosporidium are waterborne protozoa of great health concern. Many studies have attempted to find appropriate surrogates for assessing Cryptosporidium filtration removal in porous media. In this study, we evaluated the filtration of Cryptosporidium parvum in granular limestone medium by the use of biotin- and glycoprotein-coated carboxylated polystyrene microspheres (CPMs) as surrogates. Column experiments were carried out with core material taken from a managed aquifer recharge site in Adelaide, Australia. For the experiments with injection of a single type of particle, we observed the total removal of the oocysts and glycoprotein-coated CPMs, a 4.6- to 6.3-log(10) reduction of biotin- coated CPMs, and a 2.6-log(10) reduction of unmodified CPMs. When two different types of particles were simultaneously injected, glycoprotein-coated CPMs showed a 5.3-log(10) reduction, while the uncoated CPMs displayed a 3.7-log(10) reduction, probably due to particle-particle interactions. Our results confirm that glycoprotein-coated CPMs are the most accurate surrogates for C. parvum; biotin- coated CPMs are slightly more conservative, while unmodified CPMs are markedly overly conservative for predicting C. parvum removal in granular limestone medium. The total removal of C. parvum observed in our study suggests that granular limestone medium is very effective for the filtration removal of C. parvum and could potentially be used for the pretreatment of drinking water and aquifer storage recovery of recycled water.

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