Suppr超能文献

城市溪流中受市政雨水单独排放系统影响的遗传粪便源识别。

Genetic fecal source identification in urban streams impacted by municipal separate storm sewer system discharges.

机构信息

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Cincinnati, OH, United States of America.

Department of Energy and Environment, Government of the District of Columbia, Washington, DC, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2023 Jan 26;18(1):e0278548. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0278548. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Municipal stormwater systems are designed to collect, transport, and discharge precipitation from a defined catchment area into local surface waters. However, these discharges may contain unsafe levels of fecal waste. Paired measurements of Escherichia coli, precipitation, three land use metrics determined by geographic information system (GIS) mapping, and host-associated genetic markers indicative of human (HF183/BacR287 and HumM2), ruminant (Rum2Bac), dog (DG3), and avian (GFD) fecal sources were assessed in 231 urban stream samples impacted by two or more municipal stormwater outfalls. Receiving water samples were collected twice per month (n = 24) and after rain events (n = 9) from seven headwaters of the Anacostia River in the District of Columbia (United States) exhibiting a gradient of impervious surface, residential, and park surface areas. Almost 50% of stream samples (n = 103) were impaired, exceeding the local E. coli single sample maximum assessment level (410 MPN/100 ml). Fecal scores (average log10 copies per 100 ml) were determined to prioritize sites by pollution source and to evaluate potential links with land use, rainfall, and E. coli levels using a recently developed censored data analysis approach. Dog, ruminant, and avian fecal scores were almost always significantly increased after rain or when E. coli levels exceeded the local benchmark. Human fecal pollution trends showed the greatest variability with detections ranging from 9.1% to 96.7% across sites. Avian fecal scores exhibited the closest connection to land use, significantly increasing in catchments with larger residential areas after rain events (p = 0.038; R2 = 0.62). Overall, results demonstrate that combining genetic fecal source identification methods with GIS mapping complements routine E. coli monitoring to improve management of urban streams impacted by stormwater outfalls.

摘要

城市雨水系统旨在收集、输送和排放特定集水区的降水到当地地表水。然而,这些排放物可能含有不安全水平的粪便废物。在哥伦比亚特区(美国)的安那考斯蒂亚河的七个源头处,对受两个或更多市政雨水出水口影响的 231 个城市溪流样本进行了大肠埃希氏菌、降水、由地理信息系统 (GIS) 映射确定的三种土地利用指标以及指示人类(HF183/BacR287 和 HumM2)、反刍动物(Rum2Bac)、狗(DG3)和鸟类(GFD)粪便源的宿主相关遗传标记的配对测量。接收水样每月采集两次(n = 24),并在雨后(n = 9)采集,从哥伦比亚特区(美国)的安那考斯蒂亚河的七个源头处采集,这些源头处表现出不透水表面、住宅和公园表面区域的梯度。几乎 50%的溪流样本(n = 103)受损,超过当地大肠埃希氏菌单一样本最大评估水平(410 MPN/100 ml)。通过最近开发的有 censored 数据的分析方法,根据污染来源确定粪便评分(每 100 ml 的平均对数 10 拷贝),以优先考虑站点,并评估与土地利用、降雨和大肠埃希氏菌水平的潜在联系。狗、反刍动物和鸟类的粪便评分几乎总是在雨后或大肠埃希氏菌水平超过当地基准时显著增加。人类粪便污染趋势显示出最大的可变性,在各站点的检测范围从 9.1%到 96.7%不等。鸟类粪便评分与土地利用的关系最为密切,在雨后,住宅面积较大的集水区内显著增加(p = 0.038;R2 = 0.62)。总体而言,结果表明,将遗传粪便源识别方法与 GIS 制图相结合,补充了常规大肠埃希氏菌监测,以改善受雨水出水口影响的城市溪流的管理。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/eb0a/9879488/65efdfc1761a/pone.0278548.g001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验