Occurrence and persistence of bacterial and viral faecal indicators in wastewater biofilms

Archive ouverte

Skraber, S. | Helmi, K. | Willame, R. | Ferréol, M. | Gantzer, C. | Hoffmann, L. | Cauchie, H.-M.

Edité par CCSD ; IWA Publishing -

International audience. Biofilms within wastewater treatment plants can capture enteric microorganisms initially present in the water phase immobilising them either definitively or temporarily. Consequently, fates of microorganisms may totally change depending on whether they interact or not with biofilms. In this study, we assessed the stability of wastewater biofilms comparing the evolution of the concentrations of bacteria (heterotrophic plate count [HPC], thermotolerant coliforms [TC]) and viral (somatic coliphages [SC] and F-specific phages [F+]) indicators in the biofilms and in the corresponding wastewaters at 4 and 20 °C. Additionally, we assessed the monthly occurrence of these bacterial and viral indicators as well as of pathogenic protozoa (Cryptosporidium oocysts and Giardia cysts) in three native wastewater biofilms for four months. Our results show that viral indicators (SC and F+) persist longer in biofilms than in the corresponding wastewaters at 4 °C as well as at 20 °C. In contrast, persistence of bacterial indicators (TC and HPC) depends on both the temperature and the matrix. Differences between viral and bacterial persistence are discussed. Monthly analysis of native wastewater biofilms shows that bacterial and viral indicators, as well as Cryptosporidium oocysts and Giardia cysts, attach to wastewater biofilms to a concentration that remains stable in time, probably as a result of a dynamic equilibrium between attachment and detachment processes.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Interactions of Cryptosporidium parvum, Giardia lamblia, Vaccinal Poliovirus Type 1, and Bacteriophages X174 and MS2 with a Drinking Water Biofilm and a Wastewater Biofilm

Archive ouverte | Helmi, K. | CCSD

International audience. Biofilms colonizing surfaces inside drinking water distribution networks may provide a habitat and shelter to pathogenic viruses and parasites. If released from biofilms, these pathogens may ...

Pathogenic viruses in drinking-water biofilms: a public health risk?

Archive ouverte | Skraber, S. | CCSD

International audience. In this study, three types of treated wastewater were tested for infectious enteroviruses, the enterovirus genome, somatic coliphages, and Bacteroides fragilis phages. The aim of this work wa...

Occurrence and densities of bacteriophages proposed as indicators and bacterial indicators in river waters from Europe and South America

Archive ouverte | Lucena, F. | CCSD

International audience. Aims: To evaluate the feasibility of bacteriophages as a complementary tool for water quality assessment in surface waters from different parts of the globe.Methods and Results: Faecal colifo...

Chargement des enrichissements...