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Scenarios of intermittent E. coli contamination from sewer overflows to shellfish growing waters: The Dart Estuary case study

Authors :
Carlos J.A. Campos
Andrew Younger
Simon Kershaw
Luz María García-García
John Bacon
Source :
e-IEO. Repositorio Institucional Digital de Acceso Abierto del Instituto Español de Oceanografía, instname
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Sewage overflows (SOs) and Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs) significantly contribute to the bacterial contamination of coastal waters, which is of especial concern for aquaculture, a growing industry worldwide. Hydrodynamic and water quality models were used to investigate impacts of CSO discharge frequency and duration, river discharge and tides on Escherichia coli levels at shellfish farming sites in the Dart Estuary (UK), being the employed methodology generally applicable. High E. coli contamination occurred during neap tides and high river discharges due to higher retention and lower bacterial decay. Synchronicity of CSO spills affected the duration of the pollution episodes rather than peak concentrations, more influenced by discharges of the neighbouring CSOs. During peak discharges, E. coli concentrations could be 10 times higher than during average flows. CSO spills were more frequent when rainfall was >20 mm. Model outputs combined with rainfall forecasts can indicate microbiological contamination risk in the aquaculture sites.<br />2,359

Details

ISSN :
18793363
Volume :
167
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine pollution bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b468f7a2911e95c67dfbbaac2611ac9a