4.8 Article

Microbial Find, Inform, and Test Model for Identifying Spatially Distributed Contamination Sources: Framework Foundation and Demonstration of Ruminant Bacteroides Abundance in River Sediments

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 15, Pages 10451-10461

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c01602

Keywords

land-use regression; molecular microbial source tracking; ground hauling manure; river networks

Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) [T32ES007018]
  2. Marquette University Innovation Grant
  3. NSF [1316318]

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This study successfully identified the sources of ruminant Bacteroides microbial marker BoBac in rivers through microbial source tracking technology and spatial prediction models, revealing a link to land-applied manure from animal feeding operations. These findings are significant for understanding the association between animal feeding operations and microbial pollution, as well as the role of sediment as a reservoir for pollution.
Microbial pollution in rivers poses known ecological and health risks, yet causal and mechanistic linkages to sources remain difficult to establish. Host-associated microbial source tracking (MST) markers help to assess the microbial risks by linking hosts to contamination but do not identify the source locations. Land-use regression (LUR) models have been used to screen the source locations using spatial predictors but could be improved by characterizing transport (i.e., hauling, decay overland, and downstream). We introduce the microbial Find, Inform, and Test (FIT) framework, which expands previous LUR approaches and develops novel spatial predictor models to characterize the transported contributions. We applied FIT to characterize the sources of BoBac, a ruminant Bacteroides MST marker, quantified in riverbed sediment samples from Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. A 1 standard deviation increase in contributions from land-applied manure hauled from animal feeding operations (AFOs) was associated with a 77% (p-value <0.05) increase in the relative abundance of ruminant Bacteroides (BoBac-copies-per-16S-rRNA-copies) in the sediment. This is the first work finding an association between the upstream land-applied manure and the offsite bovine-associated fecal markers. These findings have implications for the sediment as a reservoir for microbial pollution associated with AFOs (e.g., pathogens and antibiotic-resistant bacteria). This framework and application advance statistical analysis in MST and water quality modeling more broadly.

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