Abstract

Contamination of surface and groundwater systems with human and animal faecal matter leads to exposure of reliant populations to disease causing micro-organisms. This exposure route remains a major cause of infection and mortality in developing countries, particularly rural regions. To meet the UN's sustainable development goal 6: Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all, we need to identify the key controls on faecal contamination across relevant settings. We conducted a high-resolution spatial study of E. coli concentration in catchment drainage waters over 6 months in a mixed land-use catchment in the extensive karst region extending across impoverished southwest China. Using a mixed effects modelling framework, we tested how land-use, karst hydrology, antecedent meteorological conditions, agricultural cycles, hydrochemistry, and position in the catchment system affected E. coli concentrations. Land-use was the best predictor of faecal contamination levels. Sites in urban areas were chronically highly contaminated, but water draining from agricultural land was also consistently contaminated and there was a catchment wide pulse of higher E. coli concentrations, turbidity, and discharge during paddy field drainage. E. coli concentration increased with increasing antecedent rainfall across all land-use types and compartments of the karst hydrological system (underground and surface waters), but decreased with increasing pH. This is interpreted to be a result of processes affecting pH, such as water residence time, rather than the direct effect of pH on E. coli survival. Improved containment and treatment of human waste in areas of higher population density would likely reduce contamination hotspots, and further research is needed to identify the nature and distribution of sources in agricultural land.

Highlights

  • Faecal contamination of catchment drinking water sources increases the risk of human exposure to pathogenic micro-organisms

  • The higher spatial than temporal variability in E. coli concentration suggests spatial controls are most relevant to average faecal contamination levels in this mixed land-use setting

  • Periods of higher catchment-wide E. coli concentrations corresponding with rainfall in the proceeding days, and discharge of paddy fields, suggest these temporal controls can become more important controls of catchment-wide E. coli concentrations than immediate surrounding land-use for transient periods

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Summary

Introduction

Faecal contamination of catchment drinking water sources increases the risk of human exposure to pathogenic micro-organisms. Faecal contamination of drinking water can originate from both point (e.g. sewage discharge) and diffuse (e.g. agricultural runoff) sources, making characterisation of controls on delivery of microbial contaminants to aquatic environments inherently difficult (Cho et al, 2016). Existing evidence suggests catchments are often complex systems within which interactions between spatial and temporal controls govern the rate of E. coli delivery to receiving waters, often depending on climate and agricultural cycles, and hydrology. In larger and/or more complex catchments, where delineation of drainage networks and source distribution is more difficult, there is greater uncertainty in the relative importance of those controls, and how they might interact to influence microbial water quality, hindering assessment and modelling (Dymond et al, 2016)

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