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Microbial Contamination in Environmental Waters of Rural and Agriculturally-Dominated Landscapes Following Hurricane Florence

Publication ,  Journal Article
Harris, AR; Fidan, EN; Nelson, NG; Emanuel, RE; Jass, T; Kathariou, S; Niedermeyer, J; Sharara, M; de los Reyes, FL; Riveros-Iregui, DA; Stewart, JR
Published in: ACS ES and T Water
September 10, 2021

Hurricane Florence brought unprecedented rainfall and flooding to Eastern North Carolina in 2018. Extensive flooding had the potential to mobilize microbial contaminants from a variety of sources. Our study evaluated microbial contaminants in surface waters at 40 sites across Eastern North Carolina 1 week after the hurricane made landfall (Phase 1) and one month later (Phase 2). High concentrations of Escherichia coli were detected in flowing channel and floodwater samples across both phases; however, channel samples during Phase 2 had higher concentrations of E. coli compared to Phase 1. Human- and swine-associated fecal markers were detected in 26% and 9% of samples, respectively, with no trends related to phase of sampling. Arcobacter butzleri was previously shown to be recovered from most (73%) samples, and detection of this pathogen was not associated with any source-associated fecal marker. Detection of Listeria spp. was associated with the swine-associated fecal marker. These results suggest that improved swine and human feces management should be explored to prevent microbial contamination in surface water, especially in regions where extreme rainfall may increase due to climate change. Sampling at higher frequency surrounding rainfall events would provide more detailed characterization of the risks posed by floodwater at different time scales and under different antecedent conditions.

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Published In

ACS ES and T Water

DOI

EISSN

2690-0637

Publication Date

September 10, 2021

Volume

1

Issue

9

Start / End Page

2012 / 2019
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Harris, A. R., Fidan, E. N., Nelson, N. G., Emanuel, R. E., Jass, T., Kathariou, S., … Stewart, J. R. (2021). Microbial Contamination in Environmental Waters of Rural and Agriculturally-Dominated Landscapes Following Hurricane Florence. ACS ES and T Water, 1(9), 2012–2019. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsestwater.1c00103
Harris, A. R., E. N. Fidan, N. G. Nelson, R. E. Emanuel, T. Jass, S. Kathariou, J. Niedermeyer, et al. “Microbial Contamination in Environmental Waters of Rural and Agriculturally-Dominated Landscapes Following Hurricane Florence.” ACS ES and T Water 1, no. 9 (September 10, 2021): 2012–19. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsestwater.1c00103.
Harris AR, Fidan EN, Nelson NG, Emanuel RE, Jass T, Kathariou S, et al. Microbial Contamination in Environmental Waters of Rural and Agriculturally-Dominated Landscapes Following Hurricane Florence. ACS ES and T Water. 2021 Sep 10;1(9):2012–9.
Harris, A. R., et al. “Microbial Contamination in Environmental Waters of Rural and Agriculturally-Dominated Landscapes Following Hurricane Florence.” ACS ES and T Water, vol. 1, no. 9, Sept. 2021, pp. 2012–19. Scopus, doi:10.1021/acsestwater.1c00103.
Harris AR, Fidan EN, Nelson NG, Emanuel RE, Jass T, Kathariou S, Niedermeyer J, Sharara M, de los Reyes FL, Riveros-Iregui DA, Stewart JR. Microbial Contamination in Environmental Waters of Rural and Agriculturally-Dominated Landscapes Following Hurricane Florence. ACS ES and T Water. 2021 Sep 10;1(9):2012–2019.

Published In

ACS ES and T Water

DOI

EISSN

2690-0637

Publication Date

September 10, 2021

Volume

1

Issue

9

Start / End Page

2012 / 2019