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Article

Grazing intensity is a poor indicator of waterborne Escherichia coli O157 activity

Details

Citation

Thorn CE, Quilliam R, Williams AP, Malham SK, Cooper DM, Reynolds B & Jones DL (2011) Grazing intensity is a poor indicator of waterborne Escherichia coli O157 activity. Anaerobe, 17 (6), pp. 330-333. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anaerobe.2011.04.021

Abstract
Contamination of watercourses with fecal matter represents a significant risk to public health due to the associated risk from human pathogens (e.g. Escherichia coli O157, norovirus). In addition, water contamination may also perpetuate the re-infection cycle of human pathogens within domesticated and wild animal populations. While diffuse pollution from agricultural fields has been identified as a major source of these pathogens, the relationship between livestock grazing intensity and subsequent pathogen persistence in water is not well established. Our aim was to critically evaluate the importance of land use management on the activity of E. coli O157 in freshwaters collected from a livestock dominated catchment in the UK. We inoculated replicate batches of both filter-sterilised and non-sterile freshwaters with a chromosomally lux-marked E. coli O157 and monitored pathogen survival and activity over a 5 d period. Our results indicate that the greatest risk for pathogens entering freshwater is probably associated with high intensity livestock areas, although their subsequent survival is greatest in waters from low intensity livestock areas. We ascribe this enhanced persistence in the latter to reduced competition and predation within these aquatic environments. These results have serious implications for the reliability of pathogen risk exposure maps which are based on grazing intensity alone.

Keywords
Animal waste; Aquatic pollution; Fecal coliforms; Land use; Quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA); Water quality

Journal
Anaerobe: Volume 17, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2011
PublisherElsevier
ISSN1075-9964

People (1)

Professor Richard Quilliam

Professor Richard Quilliam

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences