Assessing multiple fecal sources to surf zone waters of two recreational beaches by bacterial community analysis

Water Res. 2022 Aug 1:221:118781. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118781. Epub 2022 Jun 19.

Abstract

Fecal sources to recreational surf zone waters should be identified to protect public health. While watershed origins of human and other fecal sources are often discoverable by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) of fecal markers using spatially stratified samples, similarly assessing wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) outfall and other offshore contributions to surf zones is challenged by individual marker fate and transport. Here, bacterial communities were assessed for relatedness between all hypothesized fecal sources and surf zone waters for two urban California recreational beaches, by sequencing genes encoding 16S rRNA and analyzing data using SourceTracker and FEAST. Ambient marine bacterial communities dominated the surf zone, while fecal (human, dog, or gull) or wastewater (sewage or treated WWTP effluent) bacterial communities were present at low proportions and those from recycled water were absent. Based on the relative abundances of bacterial genera specifically associated with human feces, the abundances of HF183 in bacterial community sequences, and FEAST and SourceTracker results when benchmarked to HF183, the major sources of HF183 to surf zone waters were human feces and treated WWTP effluent. While surf zone sequence proportions from human sources (feces, sewage and treated WWTP effluent) appeared uncorrelated to previously obtained qPCR HF183 results, the proportions of human fecal and potential human pathogen sequences in surf zone waters were elevated when there were more swimmers (i.e. during weekday afternoons, holidays and busy weekends, and race events), thus confirming previously-published qPCR-based conclusions that bather shedding contributed low levels of human fecal contamination. Here, bacterial community sequencing also showed evidence that treated WWTP effluent from an offshore outfall was entering the surf zone, thereby resolving a prior uncertainty. Thus, bacterial community sequencing not only confirms qPCR HF183-based human marker detections, but further allows for confirming fecal sources for which individual marker quantification results can be equivocal.

Keywords: Bacterial community; Beach water quality; Fecal contamination; Human fecal marker; Microbial source tracking.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bacteria / genetics
  • Bathing Beaches*
  • Charadriiformes
  • Dogs
  • Environmental Monitoring* / methods
  • Feces* / microbiology
  • Humans
  • RNA, Ribosomal, 16S / genetics
  • Sewage* / microbiology
  • Water Microbiology*
  • Water Purification

Substances

  • RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
  • Sewage