Abstract

Wastewater treatment facilities in South Africa are obliged to make provision for wastewater effluent quality management, with the aim of securing the integrity of the surrounding watersheds and environments. The Department of Water Affairs has documented regulatory parameters that have, over the years, served as a guideline for quality monitoring/management purposes. However, these guidelines have not been regularly updated and this may have contributed to some of the water quality anomalies. Studies have shown that promoting the monitoring of the current routinely monitored parameters (both microbial and physicochemical) may not be sufficient. Organisms causing illnesses or even outbreaks, such as Vibrio pathogens with their characteristic environmental resilience, are not included in the guidelines. In South Africa, studies that have been conducted on the occurrence of Vibrio pathogens in domestic and wastewater effluent have made it apparent that these pathogens should also be monitored. The importance of effective wastewater management as one of the key aspects towards protecting surrounding environments and receiving watersheds, as well as protecting public health, is highlighted in this review. Emphasis on the significance of the Vibrio pathogen in wastewater is a particular focus.

Highlights

  • Water is a critical element and an important core for sustainable socio-economic development, along with the eradication of poverty and health discrepancies

  • This paper focuses on sustainable wastewater management as a key approach towards protecting receiving watersheds and public health

  • In a study assessing the prevalence of disease-causing enteric pathogens in rural communities of Nkonkobe, South Africa, 25% of the bacterial isolates obtained from both ground water and surface water samples were confirmed to have toxigenic Vibrio cholerae [39]

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Summary

Introduction

Water is a critical element and an important core for sustainable socio-economic development, along with the eradication of poverty and health discrepancies. Many wastewater treatment plants in South Africa still release final effluent containing significant amounts of enteric pathogens such as the Vibrio genus, known for its environmental resilience and relation to disease outbreaks. This results in the impairment of the surrounding receiving water bodies [5,7,8]. This paper focuses on sustainable wastewater management as a key approach towards protecting receiving watersheds and public health It highlights the significance of the Vibrio pathogen in wastewater, emphasizing their impact on public health and justifying the need to monitor for this pathogen

Wastewater Complexities
Wastewater Treatment
Preliminary Treatment Process
Primary Treatment Process
Secondary Treatment Process
Tertiary Treatment Process
Wastewater Management and Challenges
Some Vibrio Pathogens in Wastewater Final Effluents in South Africa
Monitoring of Pathogenic Vibrio in Wastewater
Conventional Methods
Molecular Methods
Implications of Pathogenic Vibrio for Public Health
Conclusions
Findings
A Post-2015 Global Goal for Water

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