New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts
Animal and human faecal pollution in New Zealand rivers
A. M. DONNISON
C. M. ROSS
MIRINZ Food Technology and Research
P. O. Box 617
Hamilton, New Zealand
email: a.donnison@mirinz.org.nz
Abstract Sentinel freshwater mussels (
Hydridella
menziesi) were immersed in rivers at sites impacted by faecal pollution.
The indicator bacterium,
Escherichia coli, was recovered from all
mussels including those at a forest control site, but concentrations were
highest at sites impacted by either treated sewage or treated meat-processing
waste water, or by inputs from dairy farms. The three pathogens sought were
recovered from mussels, except those at the forest (control) site:
Campylobacter jejuni and
Campylobacter coli at treated sewage sites;
Salmonella typhimurium and
C. jejuni at treated meat-processing
waste water sites; and
C. jejuni and
Yersinia enterocolitica at
sites impacted only by dairy farms. The FRNA bacteriophage concentration was
high in mussels impacted by sewage or sheep-processing waste water but was low
when the input was only from dairy farms. Mussels up to 23 km from a
sewage discharge contained a high concentration of FRNA suggesting that there
could be a health risk due to viruses, although the water did not exceed
recommended guidelines. Pathogens were also sought in untreated waste waters.
C. jejuni and
C. coli were recovered from both sheep-processing
and beef-processing waste waters and the only sewage isolate identified was
confirmed as
C. coli.
Salmonella spp. were recovered from all
waste waters, with
S. typhimurium phage type 135, isolated from a sample
of meat-processing waste water, and from mussels immersed 1 and 5 km down
stream of that plant's discharge.
Y. enterocolitica was recovered from
most samples of animal waste water. It appears that pathogens are introduced
into New Zealand rivers by all major sources of faecal contamination.
Keywords Salmonella; Campylobacter; Yersinia
enterocolitica; Hydridella menziesi; sentinel mussels; fresh waters;
faecal pollution; animal faecal wastes; sewage; meat-processing waste water;
dairy farms
M98037
Received 1 July 1998; accepted 5 October 1998
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (880K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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