Multiple approaches to microbial source tracking in tropical northern Australia
Multiple approaches to microbial source tracking in tropical northern Australia
Date
2014-09-16
Authors
Neave, Matthew J.
Luter, Heidi
Padovan, Anna
Townsend, Simon
Schobben, Xavier
Gibb, Karen
Luter, Heidi
Padovan, Anna
Townsend, Simon
Schobben, Xavier
Gibb, Karen
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Person
Person
Person
Person
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DOI
10.1002/mbo3.209
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Keywords
454 Pyrosequencing
Australia
Bacteria
DGGE
Fecal
Sewage
Tracking
Tropical
Australia
Bacteria
DGGE
Fecal
Sewage
Tracking
Tropical
Abstract
Microbial source tracking is an area of research in which multiple approaches are used to identify the sources of elevated bacterial concentrations in recreational lakes and beaches. At our study location in Darwin, northern Australia, water quality in the harbor is generally good, however dry-season beach closures due to elevated Escherichia coli and enterococci counts are a cause for concern. The sources of these high bacteria counts are currently unknown. To address this, we sampled sewage outfalls, other potential inputs, such as urban rivers and drains, and surrounding beaches, and used genetic fingerprints from E. coli and enterococci communities, fecal markers and 454 pyrosequencing to track contamination sources. A sewage effluent outfall (Larrakeyah discharge) was a source of bacteria, including fecal bacteria that impacted nearby beaches. Two other treated effluent discharges did not appear to influence sites other than those directly adjacent. Several beaches contained fecal indicator bacteria that likely originated from urban rivers and creeks within the catchment. Generally, connectivity between the sites was observed within distinct geographical locations and it appeared that most of the bacterial contamination on Darwin beaches was confined to local sources.
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© The Author(s), 2014. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in MicrobiologyOpen 3 (2014): 860–874, doi:10.1002/mbo3.209.
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MicrobiologyOpen 3 (2014): 860–874