Abstract

Coastal bathing water, as a common good, is an economic resource of public health interest. Predictive models of coastal bathing water contamination are needed for timely prevention of pollution, warning of bathers, and activation of municipal services and utilities in case of contingencies, as well as institutional mechanism designs for common good management purposes. The goal of this research is to identify the variables that would improve predictive models of coastal bathing water bacterial contamination. The microbiological quality of coastal bathing water is affected by many variables. This research is an analysis of the following determinants: precipitation amount, seawater temperature and salinity, as well as few indicators of anthropogenic pressure on the environment such as registered population, registered tourist overnight stays and the amount of generated municipal waste, all possibly directly or indirectly affecting the bathing water quality in 17 coastal municipalities in the Primorje-Gorski Kotar County. The analysis showed that rainfall, as an instrumental confounder variable, influences salinity and seawater temperature by increasing groundwater discharge and bringing contamination i.e. increasing enterococci and Escherichia coli concentrations in coastal bathing water. Population as the conjectured independent variable, representing the anthropogenic cause of pollution, was once again falsified as a statistically significant determinant. For further research, longer-term sampling (preferably year-round) at micro-locations of comparable hydrogeological characteristics is recommended.

Highlights

  • Bathing waters contaminated with faecal waste are potential sources of skin and respiratory diseases, as well as gastrointestinal, eye, ear, and nose infections [1,2]

  • The analysis showed that rainfall, as an instrumental confounder variable, influences salinity and seawater temperature by increasing groundwater discharge and bringing contamination i.e. increasing enterococci and Escherichia coli concentrations in coastal bathing water

  • Coastal bathing water quality is recognized to be one of the key factors influencing the choice of a vacation destination [3,4,5,6], and this is extremely important for Croatia as a tourist-oriented country

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Summary

Introduction

Bathing waters contaminated with faecal waste are potential sources of skin and respiratory diseases, as well as gastrointestinal, eye, ear, and nose infections [1,2]. Coastal bathing water quality must be imposed as a public health issue and as an economic issue. Coastal bathing water quality is recognized to be one of the key factors influencing the choice of a vacation destination [3,4,5,6], and this is extremely important for Croatia as a tourist-oriented country. The criterion for bathing water quality is defined as a measurable relationship between exposure to pollution and health consequences. The criteria define maximum levels of faecal pollution indicators associated with an unacceptable risk to human health. The definition of health risk acceptability, in addition to medical factors, includes social, economic and political factors and may vary greatly in various parts of the world. Water quality criteria are defined by the Bathing Water Directive 2006/07/EC, a key document for the management of bathing water quality in European union, and presently under revision [7,8]

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