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Source Tracking Identifies Origins of Waterborne Pathogens
DNA fingerprinting does detective work
After identifying a particular contaminant in a water body, a water quality
specialist's next task is to find or track its source. Once an inexact
and uncertain science, source tracking has gained greater precision, with
molecular techniques now available to identify the specific source of
a contaminant, whether livestock, wildlife or human.
And even more specifically, some source tracking techniques can identify
the type of livestock and wildlife, whether cow, pig, goat, geese, deer,
racoon, beaver, etc. as the source of fecal contamination in a water source.
The use of source tracking at Sedona Creek demonstrates its potential.
Sedona Creek is sporadically closed to swimmers and waders during the
summer months due to high coliform bacteria counts. Arizona Department
of Environmental Quality officials faulted leaking septic tanks in the
canyon. In an effort to determine specifically the contaminant source,
Gordan Southam, then a professor of environmental microbiology at Northern
Arizona University, conducted DNA testing on water samples taken from
various sites in 1998 and 1999.
He found the main culprits were nonhuman critters, with racoons contributing
30 to 35 percent of the coliform bacteria and other animals, including
skunks, coyotes, elks, horses and even lamas, contributing about another
50 percent. Humans were responsible for about 16 percent of the bacteria.
Credit for the discriminating detective work is due to source tracking,
also called genetic fingerprinting because the actual source of the contaminant
is fingerprinted.
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Milwaukee Crypto Outbreak Ten Years Ago
April 5 marked the tenth year anniversary of the Cryptosporidium
outbreak in Milaukee. The epidemic led to fundamental changes in
public health, disease surveillance, and water treatment and testing.
Investigators initially focused on farm runoff as a potential source,
but genetic analysis revealed that stool samples from infected Milwaukeeans
contained a human strain of Cryptosporidium, not a bovine one. The
official tally included 403,000 sickened, 44,000 doctor visits,
4,400 hospitalized, more than 100 deaths, 725,000 lost work or school
days, $96 million in lost wages and medical expenses and $90 million
for a new water purification system.
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In applying source tracking or genetic fingerprinting, pure cultures
of E.coli (or other enteric pathogens) are isolated from both the receiving
water and the suspected sources. For example, the Sedona study involved
isolating cultures from Sedona Creek and also from the various possible
sources of the contaminant within the watershed, including wildlife, livestock
and septic tanks. DNA isolates from the various watershed cultures were
then compared to isolates found in the creek to determine the specific
sources of pollution.
The use of molecular techniques in source tracking is relatively new,
in use for about the last six years. It is an emerging field, with various
methods having been developed and more being worked on as research intensifies
to expand the potential of the field.
Much of the impetus for developing and applying source tracking techniques
came from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and its implementation
of the total maximum daily load (TMDL) concept. Since source tracking
methods are effective tools for determining origins of fecal contamination
of water bodies, they can be used to design best management practices
to reduce fecal loading.
The molecular approach has distinct advantages over the cultural technique,
once the standard method for identifying waterborne pathogens. University
of Arizona assistant research scientist Kelly Reynolds says, "We
use to rely on growing organism in the laboratory on specific media until
we found out that only about one percent of the organism in any environment
is actually culturable.
"Molecular techniques look at a much bigger, broader, diverse picture
of the microbial community than do cultural techniques. They have enabled
us to look at more of the ecosystem instead of only organisms that grow
on food we feed them in the laboratory. Molecular methods have definitely
taken the forefront."
Reynolds adds, however, it is not an either-or matter, that cultural and
molecular techniques are sometimes combined, to take advantage of the
benefits of each method. She says, "Typically, people use a variety
of methods to make an assessment of the overall picture."
A researcher attempting to determine the source of a pollutant has various
source tracking strategies to choose from. One of the more widely used
techniques is ribotyping. Ribotyping is able to detect with a high degree
of accuracy sources of bacterial contamination, perfectly matching isolates
from humans and many different animals.
Each microbial pathogen, including individual strains or subspecies of
bacteria, has a unique genetic makeup, and ribotyping determines DNA "fingerprints"
of the bacteria or virus. The sample is then matched with E. coli isolates
from a contaminated site and potential contaminant sources in the project
area to determine a specific source.
Another commonly applied source tracking technique, antibiotic resistance
analysis (ARA) relies on patterns of antibiotic resistance of bacteria
from human and animal sources. Human fecal bacteria and animal fecal bacteria
differ in their resistence to certain antibiotics since humans and farm
animals are exposed to different sets of antibiotics. Further, various
agricultural species, e.g. cattle, pigs and poultry, each receive different
antibiotics. In contrast, wild animals receive relatively little exposure
to antibiotics. As a result, their fecal bacteria would not be expected
to exhibit substantive antibiotic resistance. ARA's determination of the
ability of bacteria to grow in the presence of different antibiotics is
a type of fingerprint, used for identifying individual sources of bacterial
contamination.
Identifying a pollutant source can be the key to resolving a particular
problem. Chuck Gerba, a professor within the UA Soil, Water and Environmental
Science Department, says, "An advantage of source tracking is that
the source can be identified, and this helps determine a solution to the
problem. Before, there was a lot of guess work."
For example, Gerba was involved in study at the Tres Rios wetlands in
Phoenix, a constructed facility fed by water released from a wastewater
treatment plant. Water leaving the wetlands tested with high levels of
E. coli. Whether the high levels were due to human or animal sources was
at issue. If the increase traced to a human source, water leaving the
wetlands might need further treatment. Using antibiotic resistance analysis
and biochemical fingerprinting, Gerba found that although some increase
was due to human sources, birds also were a factor.
Gerba says, "We did fingerprinting of the birds and the sewage, and
we found it to be about 50 50." The bird percentage increases during
the winter months when migrating birds pass through. The situation did
not warrant further water treatment.
Gerba says source tracking also has helped to identify causes for diseases
of previously unknown origins. For example, he says, "Epidemiological
relationships have been established between drinking untreated groundwater
and getting ulcers, and nobody would have guessed that 20 yrs ago. They
can fingerprint what is in your ulcer and what is in your tap water and
find the same bug."
Establishing the source of a pollutant serves other than just public heath
purposes. That direct responsibility for an waterborne outbreak can be
determined means liability also can be ascertained, thus opening the door
to litigation. Gerba warns, "It can become a field day for lawyers."
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