Twenty five years of beach monitoring in Hong Kong: A re-examination of the beach water quality classification scheme from a comparative and global perspective

Hong Kong's beach water quality classification scheme, used effectively for >25 years in protecting public health, was first established in local epidemiology studies during the late 1980s where Escherichia coli (E. coli) was identified as the most suitable faecal indicator bacteria. To revi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marine pollution bulletin 2018-06, Vol.131 (Pt A), p.793-803
Hauptverfasser: Thoe, W., Lee, Olive H.K., Leung, K.F., Lee, T., Ashbolt, Nicholas J., Yang, Ron R., Chui, Samuel H.K.
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container_end_page 803
container_issue Pt A
container_start_page 793
container_title Marine pollution bulletin
container_volume 131
creator Thoe, W.
Lee, Olive H.K.
Leung, K.F.
Lee, T.
Ashbolt, Nicholas J.
Yang, Ron R.
Chui, Samuel H.K.
description Hong Kong's beach water quality classification scheme, used effectively for >25 years in protecting public health, was first established in local epidemiology studies during the late 1980s where Escherichia coli (E. coli) was identified as the most suitable faecal indicator bacteria. To review and further substantiate the scheme's robustness, a performance check was carried out to classify water quality of 37 major local beaches in Hong Kong during four bathing seasons (March–October) from 2010 to 2013. Given the enterococci and E. coli data collected, beach classification by the local scheme was found to be in line with the prominent international benchmarks recommended by the World Health Organization and the European Union. Local bacteriological studies over the last 15 years further confirmed that E. coli is the more suitable faecal indicator bacteria than enterococci in the local context. •Performance of Hong Kong's beach classification scheme was evaluated.•E. coli and enterococci data were collected at 37 beaches weekly for 4 years.•Classification by local scheme was found to be in line with overseas benchmarks.•E. coli was considered a suitable faecal indicator bacteria in local context.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2018.05.002
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Bacteria
Bacteriological water quality
Bacteriology
Bathing
Bathing Beaches
Beach water quality classification scheme
Beaches
Benchmarks
Classification
E coli
Enterococci
Enterococcus
Environmental Monitoring
Epidemiology
Escherichia coli
Faecal indicator bacteria
Fecal coliforms
Feces - microbiology
Hong Kong
Humans
Organizations
Public health
Recreational swimming
Seasons
Water Microbiology
Water Quality
title Twenty five years of beach monitoring in Hong Kong: A re-examination of the beach water quality classification scheme from a comparative and global perspective
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