4.7 Article

Mobilization of Escherichia coli and fecal source markers from decomposing cowpats

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 853, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158509

Keywords

Microbial source tracking; Fecal sterols; Bovine; Fecal contamination; Aged fecal sources

Funding

  1. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment: Clean Water, Productive Land [C10X1006]

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This study investigates the impacts of rainfall events on the mobilization of fecal source tracking markers from aged cowpats. The results show that rainfall significantly reduces the mobilization of fecal markers in cowpats, although aged cowpats still release a substantial concentration of Escherichia coli. The study also identifies ten stable fecal steroid markers. These findings contribute to improved source attribution of elevated E. coli in rural environments by water managers.
In rural environments, the sources of fecal contamination in freshwater environments are often diffuse and a mix of fresh and aged fecal sources. It is important for water monitoring purposes, therefore, to understand the impacts of weathering on detection of the fecal source markers available for mobilization from livestock sources. This study targets the impacts of rainfall events on the mobilization of fecal source tracking (FST) markers from simulated cowpats decomposing in situ for five-and-a-half-months. The FST markers analysed were Escherichia coli, microbial source tracking (MST) markers, fecal steroids and a fecal ageing ratio based on the ratio between counts of river microflora and total coliforms. There was a substantial concentration of E. coli (104/100 mL) released from the ageing cowpats suggesting a long-term reservoir of E. coli in the cowpat. Mobilization of fecal markers from rainfall-impacted cowpats, however, was markedly reduced compared with fecal markers in the cowpat. Overall, the Bacteroidales bovine-associated MST markers were less persistent than E. coli in the cowpat and rainfall runoff. The ten fecal steroids, including the major herbivore steroid, 24-ethylcoprostanol, are shown to be stable markers of bovine pollution due to statistically similar degradation rates among all steroids. The mobilizable fraction for each FST marker in the rainfall runoff allowed generation of mobilization decline curves and the derived decline rate constants can be incorporated into source attribution models for agricultural contaminants. Findings from this study of aged bovine pollution sources will enable water managers to improve attribution of elevated E. coli to the appropriate fecal source in rural environments.

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