posted on 2019-12-30, 15:37authored byBaolei Wu, Chunwei Wang, Chongmiao Zhang, Michael J. Sadowsky, Mawuli Dzakpasu, Xiaochang C. Wang
Human contact with fecally contaminated waters often
raises public
health concern. The infection potential closely relates to the fecal
source type and the aging persistence of waterborne pathogens. In
this study, the health risk of contracting gastroenteritis from exposure
to aging fecal contamination was predicted using source-associated
markers. Microbial decay characteristics in typical summer seawater
were incorporated into a pathogen dose estimation model for a constant
fecal input. Results show that the median illness probability commensurate
with the health benchmark of 36/1000 corresponded to the marker concentrations
of ∼7.8, ∼6.6, ∼3.7, and ∼3.5 log10 gene copies/100 mL for seagulls, cattle, raw sewage, and
treated effluent, respectively. The error in risk estimates due to
neglecting microbial decay was linearly correlated to the decay differences
between markers and pathogens. Specifically, the health risk associated with nonhuman sources,
which was primarily contributed by bacterial and parasitic pathogens,
can be substantially overestimated, while that for virus-dominated
human sources was insignificantly affected by the differential decay.
Additionally, seagulls dominated the Enterococcus concentration in waters with a mixture of the above-mentioned sources,
although they posed limited health risk. This study provides an approach
to understanding the influence of fecal aging on health risk estimation.