1. Impact of flooding on microbiological contamination of domestic water sources: a longitudinal study in northern Ghana
- Author
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Mawuli Dzodzomenyo, Moses Asamoah, Chengxiu Li, Elvis Kichana, and Jim Wright
- Subjects
Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Flooding is the most frequent natural hazard globally, but evidence of its impact on domestic water point contamination remains limited. This study aimed to assess dam-related flooding’s impact on microbiological contamination of rural water points and to evaluate agreement of satellite-derived flood maps with ground-based observations of water point flooding. Fieldwork took place in two Ghanaian districts frequently flooded following dam overspill. Fifty-seven water points were tested for bacterial parameters during and immediately after flooding. Forty water points were resampled in the dry season, with the remainder having run dry. Ground-based observations of flooding were compared with three satellite-derived flood maps. Boreholes were less contaminated than wells or surface waters (geometric mean E. coli = 20.2, 175.6, and 590.7 cfu/100 ml, respectively). Among groundwater points, a Wilcoxon signed-rank test indicated significantly greater median E. coli and thermotolerant coliform contamination during flooding (p = 0.025 and p E. coli, Shigella, and Salmonella counts were significantly greater in dry season samples (p
- Published
- 2022