posted on 2016-02-22, 05:20authored byL. Jeanneau, O. Solecki, N. Wéry, E. Jardé, M. Gourmelon, P. -Y. Communal, A. Jadas-Hécart, M. -P. Caprais, G. Gruau, A. -M. Pourcher
Fecal contaminations of inland and coastal waters induce
risks
to human health and economic losses. To improve water management,
specific markers have been developed to differentiate between sources
of contamination. This study investigates the relative decay of fecal
indicator bacteria (FIB, Escherichia coli and enterococci)
and six human-associated markers (two bacterial markers: Bacteroidales HF183 (HF183) and Bifidobacterium adolescentis (BifAd);
one viral marker: genogroup II F-specific RNA bacteriophages (FRNAPH
II); three chemical markers: caffeine and two fecal stanol ratios)
in freshwater and seawater microcosms seeded with human wastewater.
These experiments were performed in darkness, at 20 °C and under
aerobic conditions. The modeling of the decay curves allows us (i)
to compare FIB and markers and (ii) to classify markers according
to their persistence in seawater (FRNAPH II < HF183, stanol ratios
< BifAd, caffeine) and in freshwater (HF183, stanol ratios <
FRNAPH II < BifAd < caffeine). Although those results depend
on the experimental conditions, this study represents a necessary
step to develop and validate an interdisciplinary toolbox for the
investigation of the sources of fecal contaminations.