Surf zone microbiological water quality following emergency beach nourishment using sediments from a catastrophic debris flow

Urban disaster response requires disposal of complex wastes. This study regards a case wherein high intensity rainfall fell over a remote mountainous area previously burned by wildfire, generating debris flows that devastated a downstream town. Sanitary sewers and homes with septic systems were dama...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water research (Oxford) 2020-06, Vol.176, p.115733-115733, Article 115733
Hauptverfasser: Li, Dong, Van De Werfhorst, Laurie C., Dunne, Thomas, Devarajan, Naresh, Ayala, Tania Gomez, Holden, Patricia A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Urban disaster response requires disposal of complex wastes. This study regards a case wherein high intensity rainfall fell over a remote mountainous area previously burned by wildfire, generating debris flows that devastated a downstream town. Sanitary sewers and homes with septic systems were damaged, releasing human waste into the debris flow field. Contaminated sediments, with their high fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) concentrations, were cleared from public rights-of-way and creek channels by local authorities, then disposed onto distant Goleta Beach for beach nourishment, causing immediate surf zone microbiological water quality exceedances. To determine potential public health threats, disposed sediments and surf zone waters were sampled and analyzed—relative to reference samples of mountain soil and raw sewage—for FIB, pathogens, human (HF183) and other host- (Gull2 TaqMan, and DogBact) associated DNA-based fecal markers, and bacterial community 16S rRNA gene sequences. Approximately 20% of disposed sediment samples contained the HF183 marker; sequencing suggested that all samples were contaminated by sewage. In an initial sediment disposal period, surf zone waters harbored intestinal bacterial sequences that were shared with disposed sediments and sewage. Yet surf zone bacterial communities returned to mostly marine clades within weeks. Taken together, multiple conventional and DNA-based analyses informed this forensic assessment of human waste contamination. In the future, similar analyses could be used earlier in disaster response to guide sediment disposal decisions towards continuously protecting beachgoer health. [Display omitted] •Sediments from an urban debris flow were used to nourish a recreational beach.•Surf zone microbiological water quality diminished upon sediment disposal.•Several molecular approaches indicated human waste contamination of sediments.•In time, surf zone bacterial communities recovered to mainly marine clades.
ISSN:0043-1354
1879-2448
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2020.115733