1. Drinking Water as a Vehicle of Diseases
Water is essential to life. An adequate, safe and accessible supply must be available to all. Improving access to safe drinking-water can result in significant benefits to health. Every effort should be made to achieve a drinking water quality as safe as possible [
1].
Many people struggle to obtain access to safe water. A clean and treated water supply to each house may be the norm in Europe and North America, but in developing countries, access to both clean water and sanitation are not the rule, and waterborne infections are common. Two and a half billion people have no access to improved sanitation, and more than 1.5 million children die each year from diarrheal diseases [
2]. According to the WHO, the mortality of water associated diseases exceeds 5 million people per year. From these, more that 50% are microbial intestinal infections, with cholera standing out in the first place.
In general terms, the greatest microbial risks are associated with ingestion of water that is contaminated with human or animal feces. Wastewater discharges in fresh waters and costal seawaters are the major source of fecal microorganisms, including pathogens [
1–
4].
Acute microbial diarrheal diseases are a major public health problem in developing countries. People affected by diarrheal diseases are those with the lowest financial resources and poorest hygienic facilities. Children under five, primarily in Asian and African countries, are the most affected by microbial diseases transmitted through water [
5].
Microbial waterborne diseases also affect developed countries. In the USA, it has been estimated that each year 560,000 people suffer from severe waterborne diseases, and 7.1 million suffer from a mild to moderate infections, resulting in estimated 12,000 deaths a year [
6]. The most important bacterial diseases transmitted through water are listed in .
The main bacterial diseases transmitted through drinking water.
8. Fecal Indicator Chemical Compounds
Several chemical substances have been used as markers of fecal pollution in environmental waters. Caffeine is present in several beverages and in many pharmaceutical products. It is excreted in the urine of individuals who have ingested the substance. The main source of caffeine in domestic wastewaters is excretion following consumption of coffee, tea, soft drinks, or medication. Levels of caffeine in domestic wastewater have been measured to be between 20 and 300 μg/L. Levels in receiving waters are much lower due to significant dilution. Due to its high solubility, low octanol-water partition coefficient, insignificant volatility and clear anthropogenic origin, the presence of caffeine in environmental waters can be a good marker for human fecal pollution [
124–
129].
However, relationships between fecal indicator bacteria and caffeine are variable. Wu
et al. [
129] reported a study carried out in the Rochor Canal and Marina Bay, Singapore. In Rochor Canal, the highest concentration of caffeine (1.35 ng/mL) was found at downstream, and the lowest (0.68 and 0.37 ng/mL) were determined at middle and upstream points. At Marina Bay, the concentration of caffeine was in the range of 0.41–0.96 ng/mL. Fecal coliform concentrations were very high, exceeding 5,000 CFU/100 mL. Caffeine and fecal coliform concentrations were significantly correlated in Rochor Canal samples, but no significant correlation was observed in Martina Bay water samples.
The use of caffeine as marker of fecal pollution has additional important limitations. Caffeine is often present in the urban environment from numerous plant species debris as well as from human “dumping” of coffee wastes. In addition, the current analytical methods used are relatively complex and expensive [
124].
Coprostanol (5β-cholestan-3β-ol) is a fecal stanol that is formed by indigenous bacteria present in the gut of humans and higher animals, during catabolism of cholesterol. It is the main stanol present in human feces (24 to 89% of total steroids) and in domestic wastewater. Based on these facts, it has been proposed as a chemical indicator of human fecal pollution. Feces from pigs and cats also contain coprostanol, but at much lower levels. Additional fecal stanols, such as 24-ethylcoprostanol, were found to be predominant in herbivores, such as cows, horses, and sheep, suggesting potential use of this chemical as an indicator of fecal pollution from these sources. Reported half-lives of coprostanol in aerobic conditions are generally lower than 10 days at 20 °C. Thus, the presence of coprostanol in an aerobic environment can be considered an indication of recent fecal input to the waters. [
124,
128,
130].
Isobe
et al. [
130] reported a study carried out in the Mekong Delta (Vietnam) and in the Tokyo metropolitan area. During the wet season in the Mekong Delta, higher bacterial densities were observed in rivers, probably due to the higher bacterial inputs from soil particles with runoff. In Tokyo, higher bacterial densities were usually observed during summer, followed by those in the typhoon aftermath and winter. Significant correlations between the concentrations of
E. coli and coprostanol (log scale) were found in all surveys. It was concluded that the determination of coprostanol can improve standard microbiological assays of fecal pollution.
Reports from several regions throughout the world indicate variable quantitative relationships between fecal coliform densities and coprostanol concentrations. In the Derwent Estuary and Sydney region (Australia), coprostanol concentration of 400 ng/L corresponded to 1,000 CFU of fecal coliforms/100 mL. In the Mekong Delta, during the wet season, this coliform density corresponded to 30 ng coprostanol/L, and in the dry seasons, 100 ng/L. In Tokyo metropolitan area, these values were 30 ng coprostanol/L, in summer, and 100 ng coprostanol/L, in a typhoon aftermath. These differences were interpreted as a result of differences in water temperature and soil particle concentration [
130].
Fecal sterol analysis, although expensive and complex, has resolved problems of source attribution in urban and rural environments not possible with use of traditional fecal indicator bacteria [
124]. These chemical indicators are especially useful in environments which allow survival and growth of fecal bacteria. For instance, in tropical regions, characterized by high temperatures and frequent rainstorms that facilitate erosion of soils, fecal bacteria can proliferate in environmental waters reaching densities that are not representative of real sewage inputs in the environment [
130].
10. Which Indicators of Fecal Pollution Should be Used?
Several fecal indicator bacteria in environmental waters are in current use. From these stand out fecal coliforms,
E. coli and enterococci [
1,
6,
137]. In environmental waters, most fecal coliform strains are
E. coli.
In particular situations, the presence of
E. coli is definitively not associated with fecal pollution. These situations were firstly detected in some African countries, namely Nigeria, Ivory Coast and New Guinea (although not in others, such as Uganda) [
42,
99].
Recent studies carried out in temperate zones indicated that
E. coli can persist in secondary, nonhost habitats, outside the hot tropical areas, and become naturalized in these habitats. Byappanahalli
et al. [
138] reported that
E. coli could be isolated from coastal temperate forest soils in Indiana (USA). The aquatic alga
Cladophora glomerata (L.) from several Lake Michigan beaches was shown to harbor high densities of
E. coli [
139].
Ishii
et al. [
140] reported a study on the survival of
E. coli in temperate riverine soils of northern Minnesota (USA). Viable
E. coli populations were repeatedly isolated from northern temperate soils in three Lake Superior watersheds. Seasonal variation in the population density of soilborne
E. coli was observed; the greatest cell densities were found in the summer to fall, and the lowest numbers, occurred during the winter to spring months. Horizontal, fluorophore-enhanced repetitive extragenic palindromic PCR (HFERP) DNA fingerprint analyses indicated that identical soilborne
E. coli genotypes, overwintered in frozen soil and were present over time, and that these strains were different from
E. coli strains obtained from wildlife commonly found in the studied habitats or river water. Soilborne
E. coli strains had HFERP DNA fingerprints that were unique to specific soils and locations. In laboratory studies, naturalized
E. coli strains had the ability to grow and replicate to high cell densities, in nonsterile soils when incubated at 30 or 37 °C and survived longer than 1 month when soil temperatures were lower than 25 °C. It was concluded that these
E. coli strains became naturalized, autochthonous members of the soil microbial community.
In a latter paper, Ksoll
et al. [
141] studied epilithic periphyton communities at three sites on the Minnesota shoreline of Lake Superior (USA). Fecal coliform densities increased up to 4 orders of magnitude in early summer, and decreased during autumn. HFERP DNA fingerprint analyses indicated that waterfowl (geese, terns, and gulls) were the major primary source of periphyton
E. coli strains that could be identified. Periphyton and sewage effluent were also major potential sources. Several periphyton
E. coli isolates were genotypically identical, repeatedly isolated over time. Inoculated
E. coli rapidly colonized natural periphyton in laboratory microcosms and persisted for several weeks, and some cells were released to the overlying water. It was concluded that
E. coli had became a naturalized member of the bacterial periphyton communities.
The presence, persistence, and possible naturalization of E. coli in these habitats can confound the use of fecal coliforms as a reliable indicator of recent fecal contamination of environmental waters. Future studies should consider other nonhost habitats as potential sources of fecal coliform bacteria in aquatic environments.
Considering these limitations, it appears to be advisable, in order to check the microbiological quality of drinking water, to complement the determination of Escherichia coli with the assay of enterococci. This rationale that has been followed, for many years, in the making of the drinking-water legislation in the European Union.
However, for many developing countries, where limited financial resources are the norm and reality, the routine determination of these two parameters can be difficult to implement. In these circumstances, it appears common sense that is better to determine a (good) parameter, such as Escherichia coli, than have no analysis done.
In this context, USA legislation emerges as a pragmatic approach to the problem. According to the American legislation, total coliforms are the routine parameter to be determined. Only when these determinations are repeatedly positive, it is mandatory to assess fecal coliforms [
142,
143]. Although total coliforms are not necessarily fecal bacteria, the rationale behind this system is correct, since: (1) a positive test in fecal coliforms (which is our target) is necessarily positive in the total coliform procedure; (2) the inverse is not necessarily true; (3) total coliforms are easily and cheaply assayed in waters.
As an alternative to the determination of both E. coli and enterococci, the assay of ammonia in environmental waters can be useful and complement the determination of fecal coliforms.
Ammonia is one of the key molecules in the nitrogen cycle. The presence of ammonia in surface waters can be due to direct contamination by agricultural fertilizers, and/or to microbial degradation of proteins, nucleic acids and urea, implying therefore the presence of a considerable concentration of organic matter in the water. Ammonia is rapidly oxidized in the environment and is typically found in natural waters at concentrations less than 0.1 mg/L. Concentrations significantly above this indicate gross contamination by fresh sanitary waste, where ammonia levels are typically very high (tens or hundreds of mg/L) [
84].
Espigares
et al. [
144] reported a comparative study of chemical and microbiological indicators (total and fecal coliforms, fecal streptococci and sulphite-reducing clostridia) in a stretch of the Guadalquivir River (Spain) and its affluents. Total coliforms were correlated with fecal coliforms, but were not correlated with fecal streptococci and clostridia. Fecal coliforms were correlated with the other indicators. Fecal streptococci and sulphite-reducing clostridia were correlated with the other indicators except for total coliforms. All these microbiological indicators were correlated with dissolved oxygen (negatively), dissolved organic carbon and ammonia (positively). Cabral and Marques [
85] in a study of a polluted river (Febros) in the Great Oporto area (northwest Portugal) found that ammonia was significantly correlated with all the microbiological assayed parameters—total and fecal coliforms, fecal streptococci and enterococci. These correlations are most probably due to the carry-over of organic matter in wastewaters, and to a high microbial ammonification activity [
85].
Simple and rapid in-field tests and automated and continuous systems are available for the assay of ammonia in environmental waters. More studies are needed in order to confirm the use of ammonia as a reliable parameter in a preliminary screening for emergency fecal pollution outbreaks.
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