4.3 Article

Coliphages as Indicators for the Microbial Quality of Treated Wastewater Effluents

Journal

FOOD AND ENVIRONMENTAL VIROLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 170-178

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12560-020-09459-5

Keywords

Coliphages; Fecal coliform; Wastewater; Water reuse; Microbial indicators

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study focused on concentrating and reducing coliphages in treated effluent, comparing various methods and evaluating their efficiency. The research highlighted the relationship between FC and coliphages, suggesting that monitoring coliphages could be a more accurate indicator of health risks posed by the application of tertiary effluent.
Wastewater effluents are a reliable water source for non-potable water reuse including unrestricted crop irrigation in arid regions suffering from water scarcity. This study was performed to develop and optimize a procedure to concentrate coliphages from 100 L of treated effluent. Moreover, the reduction of coliphages by filtration and disinfection by either chlorine or UV was compared with that of fecal coliform (FC). The adsorption efficiency of MS2 and Q beta coliphages by the NanoCeram filter was similar and reached 99.8%. Elution efficiency of MS2 coliphage from the NanoCeram filters by a solution of 1% NaPP and 0.05 M glycine, pH 9.5, was 74 +/- 9.5%. The highest reconcentration efficiency of MS2 and Q beta coliphages was obtained with polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation and reached 76 +/- 28% and 90 +/- 11%, respectively. In comparison, the reconcentration efficiency of organic flocculation was 0% and 1.3% for Q beta and MS2 coliphages, respectively. The overall recovery efficiency of MS2 coliphages from 100 L tertiary effluent was 57 +/- 1.5%. Poor reduction was observed for coliphages compared to FC by filtration and chlorine disinfection although; the reduction of FC, as measured by cultivation, was satisfactory and within the guidelines for unrestricted irrigation. High correlation between the reduction of FC and coliphages was recorded for tertiary effluent disinfected by UV irradiation. Monitoring the microbial quality of tertiary effluent using qPCR for the enumeration of FC was found unsuitable, because DNA levels were unaffected by the treatment processes. The results of this study demonstrated that monitoring the microbial quality of tertiary effluent by FC may not reflect the health risks encountered by the application of these effluents and the addition of coliphages to the monitoring programs may allow for accurate assessment of the health risks introduced by the application of tertiary effluent.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available