posted on 2017-05-31, 00:00authored byXiao Ma, Amit Vikram, Leonard Casson, Kyle Bibby
Drinking
water microbial communities impact opportunistic pathogen
colonization and corrosion of water distribution systems, and centralized
drinking water treatment represents a potential control for microbial
community structure in finished drinking water. In this article, we
examine bacterial and fungal abundance and diversity, as well as the
microbial community taxonomic structure following each unit operation
in a conventional surface water treatment plant. Treatment operations
drove the microbial composition more strongly than sampling time.
Both bacterial and fungal abundance and diversity decreased following
sedimentation and filtration; however, only bacterial abundance and
diversity was significantly impacted by free chlorine disinfection.
Similarly, each treatment step was found to shift bacterial and fungal
community beta-diversity, with the exception of disinfection on the
fungal community structure. We observed the enrichment of bacterial
and fungal taxa commonly found in drinking water distribution systems
through the treatment process, for example, Sphingomonas following filtration and Leptospirillium and Penicillium following disinfection.
Study results suggest that centralized drinking water treatment processes
shape the final drinking water microbial community via selection of
community members and that the bacterial community is primarily driven
by disinfection while the eukaryotic community is primarily controlled
by physical treatment processes.