1. A Somatic Coliphage Threshold Approach To Improve the Management of Activated Sludge Wastewater Treatment Plant Effluents in Resource-Limited Regions.
- Author
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Chacón, Luz, Barrantes, Kenia, Santamaría-Ulloa, Carolina, Solano, Melissa, Reyes, Liliana, Taylor, Lizeth, Valiente, Carmen, Symonds, Erin M., and Achí, Rosario
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SEWAGE disposal plants , *SLUDGE management , *SEWAGE sludge , *SEWAGE purification , *ACTIVATED sludge process , *WATER reuse - Abstract
Effective wastewater management is crucial to ensure the safety of water reuse projects and effluent discharge into surface waters. Multiple studies have demonstrated that municipal wastewater treatment with conventional activated sludge processes is inefficient for the removal of a wide spectrum of viruses in sewage. In this study, a well-accepted statistical approach was used to investigate the relationship between viral indicators and human enteric viruses during wastewater treatment in a resource-limited region. Influent and effluent samples from five urban wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in Costa Rica were analyzed for somatic coliphage and human enterovirus, hepatitis A virus, norovirus genotypes I and II, and rotavirus. All WWTPs provide primary treatment followed by conventional activated sludge treatment prior to discharge into surface waters that are indirectly used for agricultural irrigation. The results revealed a statistically significant relationship between the detection of at least one of the five human enteric viruses and somatic coliphage. Multiple logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic curve analysis identified a threshold of 3.0x10³ (3.5 log10) somatic coliphage PFU per 100ml, which corresponded to an increased likelihood of encountering enteric viruses above the limit of detection (>1.83x10² virus targets/100ml). Additionally, quantitative microbial risk assessment was executed for farmers indirectly reusing WWTP effluent that met the proposed threshold. The resulting estimated median cumulative annual disease burden complied with World Health Organization recommendations. Future studies are needed to validate the proposed threshold for use in Costa Rica and other regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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