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  4. Origin and spatial–temporal distribution of faecal bacteria in a bay of Lake Geneva, Switzerland

Origin and spatial–temporal distribution of faecal bacteria in a bay of Lake Geneva, Switzerland

Author(s)
Poté, John
Goldscheider, Nicola
Haller, Laurence
Zopfi, Jakob  
Laboratoire de microbiologie  
Khajehnouri, Fereidoun
Wildi, Walter
Date issued
2009
In
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, Springer, 2009/154/1-4/337-348
Subjects
Water pollution Recreational water Drinking water Faecal indicator bacteria Microbial pathogens Salmonella Wastewater treatment plant Human health risk Lake Geneva
Abstract
The origin and distribution of microbial contamination in Lake Geneva’s most polluted bay were assessed using faecal indicator bacteria (FIB). The lake is used as drinking water, for recreation and fishing. During 1 year, water samples were taken at 23 points in the bay and three contamination sources: a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP), a river and a storm water outlet. Analyses included <i>Escherichia coli</i>, enterococci (ENT), total coliforms (TC), and heterotrophic plate counts (HPC). <i>E. coli</i> input flux rates from the WWTP can reach 2.5 × 10<sup>10</sup> CFU/s; those from the river are one to three orders of magnitude lower. Different pathogenic <i>Salmonella</i> serotypes were identified in water from these sources. FIB levels in the bay are highly variable. Results demonstrate that (1) the WWTP outlet at 30 m depth impacts near-surface water quality during holomixis in winter; (2) when the lake is stratified, the effluent water is generally trapped below the thermocline; (3) during major floods, upwelling across the thermocline may occur; (4) the river permanently contributes to contamination, mainly near the river mouth and during floods, when the storm water outlet contributes additionally; (5) the lowest FIB levels in the near-surface water occur during low-flow periods in the bathing season.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/61149
DOI
10.1007/s10661-008-0401-8
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