4.8 Article

Patterns of Host-Associated Fecal Indicators Driven by Hydrology, Precipitation, and Land Use Attributes in Great Lakes Watersheds

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 20, Pages 11500-11509

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b01945

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Graham Sustainability Institute Water Center at University of Michigan [N017027]
  2. Great Lakes Restoration Initiative [DW-014-92453901]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01AI091829]

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Fecal contamination from sewage and agricultural runoff is a pervasive problem in Great Lakes watersheds. Most work examining fecal pollution loads relies on discrete samples of fecal indicators and modeling land use. In this study, we made empirical measurements of human and ruminant-associated fecal indicator bacteria and combined these with hydrological measurements in eight watersheds ranging from predominantly forested to highly urbanized. Flow composited river samples were collected over low-flow (n = 89) and rainfall or snowmelt runoff events (n = 130). Approximately 90% of samples had evidence of human fecal pollution, with highest loads from urban watersheds. Ruminant indicators were found in similar to 60-100% of runoff-event samples in agricultural watersheds, with concentrations and loads related to cattle density. Rain depth, season, agricultural tile drainage, and human or cattle density explained variability in daily flux of human or ruminant indicators. Mapping host-associated indicator loads to watershed discharge points sheds light on the type, level, and possible health risk from fecal pollution entering the Great Lakes and can inform total maximum daily load implementation and other management practices to target specific fecal pollution sources.

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