Abstract

The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) recently identified the need to improve its capacity for detecting and tracking land-based sources of pollution (LBSP) in coastal waters, particularly microbial contaminants like fecal indicator bacteria (FIB). Reported here is a baseline study of a suite of host-specific FIB microbial source tracking (MST) markers in the coastal shoreline and reef waters around the island of Saipan. Three sampling campaigns were conducted in September 2017, March 2018, and August 2018. Samples were collected from the nearshore surface waters of Saipan, the reef waters of Saipan Lagoon, and groundwater from beaches along the Saipan Lagoon shoreline. Measurements of submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) into nearshore waters and isotopic source tracking of nitrogen inputs were conducted concurrently with MST. Environmental DNA was extracted from the samples and analyzed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) for MST gene markers of fecal Bacteroidales specifically associated with humans, dogs, cows, and pigs, and for an MST gene marker of Catellicoccus associated with seabirds. MST assessments were combined with local knowledge, assessments of sanitary infrastructure, and routine watershed surveys. This study identified hotspots of human FIB along the western Saipan Lagoon shoreline in both surface waters and groundwater, plus another hotspot of human FIB at a popular tourist bathing area known as the Grotto. FIB hotspots on the Lagoon shoreline coincided with areas of high SGD and nitrogen isotopic data indicating sewage-derived N inputs. It appears that faulty sanitary infrastructure may be contributing to inputs to Saipan Lagoon, while bather shedding is likely a primary input for the Grotto area. Moderate levels of dog fecal contamination were common and widespread across the island. High levels of seabird fecal contamination were more random, both spatially and temporally, and mostly concentrated along the less developed northeast region of Saipan. No significant levels of cow or pig fecal marker were detected in coastal water samples. This study provides demonstration and establishment of analytical capacity to resource management in CNMI for MST technology to aid in trouble-shooting water quality issues involving land-based sources of microbial contaminants to CNMI coastal waters.

Highlights

  • The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) is a territory of the United States that comprises all the islands of the Northern Mariana archipelago chain in the northwest Pacific, except for the island of Guam

  • The upper exposure threshold line represents the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recommended BAV for the Single Threshold Value (STV) of individual grab samples (70 Most Probable Number (MPN)/100 mL it should again be noted that the CNMI BAV as promulgated by the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality (BECQ) is 130 MPN/100 mL), which is based on the 90% confidence interval (CI) reflective of 36 illnesses per 1000 bathers

  • We found that the west central shoreline region of Saipan Lagoon was the greatest contributor of human-specific fecal bacteria contamination to the lagoon and reef tract during the period of study

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Summary

Introduction

The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) is a territory of the United States that comprises all the islands of the Northern Mariana archipelago chain in the northwest Pacific, except for the island of Guam (which is its own separate US territory). The largest of the 14 islands of the CNMI, is the capital and houses the largest population, with the majority of communities situated along Saipan’s western coast. Waters along this area are negatively impacted by chronic sediment, nutrient, and microbial pollution that, combined with other stressors such as temperature-induced bleaching, ocean acidification, fishing pressures, reef tourism pressures, etc., can affect many of the island’s western and southeastern reefs (Starmer et al, 2008; Yuknavage et al, 2018). Since the 1940s, the Saipan Lagoon system has lost about 20% of its seagrass and coral cover (Perez et al, 2018)

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