Back to Search Start Over

Compositional and temporal stability of fecal taxon libraries for use with SourceTracker in sub-tropical catchments.

Authors :
O'Dea, Christian
Zhang, Qian
Staley, Christopher
Masters, Nicole
Kuballa, Anna
Fisher, Paul
Veal, Cameron
Stratton, Helen
Sadowsky, Michael J.
Ahmed, Warish
Katouli, Mohammad
Source :
Water Research. Nov2019, Vol. 165, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Characterization of microbial communities using high-throughput amplicon sequencing is an emerging approach for microbial source tracking of fecal pollution. This study used SourceTracker software to examine temporal and geographical variability of fecal bacterial community profiles to identify pollutant sources in three freshwater catchments in sub-tropical Australia. Fecal bacterial communities from 10 animal species, humans, and composite wastewater samples from six sewage treatment plants were characterized and compared to freshwater samples using Illumina amplicon sequencing of the V5–V6 regions of the 16S rRNA gene. Source contributions were calculated in SourceTracker using new fecal taxon libraries as well as previously generated libraries to determine the effects of geographic and temporal variability on source assignments. SourceTracker determined 16S rRNA bacterial communites within freshwater samples, shared taxonomic similarities to that of wastewater at low levels (typically <3%). SourceTraker also predicted occasional fecal detection of deer and flying fox sources in the water samples. No significant differences in source contributions were observed within sequences from current and previously characterized fecal samples (P ≥ 0.107). However, significant differences were observed between previously characterized and newly characterized source communities (ANOSIM P ≤ 0.001), which shared <15% community composition. Results suggest temporal instability of fecal taxon libraries among tested sources and highlight continual evaluation of community-based MST using confirmatory qPCR analyses of marker genes. Image 1 • 16S rRNA sequencing established microbial profiles of three catchments. • Sewage microbial communities showed low similarity to those of water samples. • Deer and flying fox fecal contamination were found in several samples. • Dog fecal contamination showed a greater contribution than did other sources. • Dog fecal taxon libraries showed the greatest temporal stability over the other source libraries examined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
165
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
138548512
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.114967