Abstract
Sewage contamination of freshwater occurs in the form of raw waste or as effluent from wastewater treatment plants (WWTP's). While raw waste (animal and human) and under-functioning WWTP's can introduce live enteric bacteria to freshwater systems, most WWTP's, even when operating correctly, do not remove bacterial genetic material from treated waste, resulting in the addition of bacterial DNA, including antibiotic resistance genes, into water columns and sediment of freshwater systems. In freshwater systems with both raw and treated waste inputs, then, there will be increased interaction between live sewage-associated bacteria (untreated sewage) and DNA contamination (from both untreated and treated wastewater effluent). To evaluate this understudied interaction between DNA and bacterial contamination in the freshwater environment, we conducted a three-month field-based study of sewage-associated bacteria and genetic material in water and sediment in a freshwater tributary of the Hudson River (NY, USA) that supplies drinking water and receives treated and untreated wastewater discharges from several municipalities. Using both DNA and culture-based bacterial analyses, we found that both treated and untreated sewage influences water and sediment bacterial communities in this tributary, and water-sediment exchanges of enteric bacteria and genetic material. Our results also indicated that the treated sewage effluent on this waterway serves as a concentrated source of intI1 (antibiotic resistance) genes, which appear to collect in the sediments below the outfall along with fecal indicator bacteria. Our work also captured the environmental impact of a large rain event that perturbed bacterial populations in sediment and water matrices, independently from the outflow. This study suggests that large precipitation events are an important cause of bacterial and DNA contamination for freshwater tributaries, with runoff from the surrounding environment being an important factor.
Original language | English (US) |
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Article number | 179010 |
Journal | Science of the Total Environment |
Volume | 972 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Apr 1 2025 |
Keywords
- Bacteria
- Contamination
- Effluent
- Freshwater
- Indicators
- River
- Sediments
- Sewage
- Stream
- WWTP
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Environmental Engineering
- Environmental Chemistry
- Waste Management and Disposal
- Pollution