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. 2004 Aug;70(8):4658-65.
doi: 10.1128/AEM.70.8.4658-4665.2004.

Genetic diversity of Escherichia coli isolated from urban rivers and beach water

Affiliations

Genetic diversity of Escherichia coli isolated from urban rivers and beach water

Sandra L McLellan. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2004 Aug.

Abstract

Repetitive element anchored PCR was used to evaluate the genetic profiles of Escherichia coli isolated from surface water contaminated with urban stormwater, sanitary sewage, and gull feces to determine if strains found in environmental samples reflect the strain composition of E. coli obtained from host sources. Overall, there was less diversity in isolates collected from river and beach sites than with isolates obtained from human and nonhuman sources. Unique strain types comprised 28.8, 29.2, and 15.0% of the isolate data sets recovered from stormwater, river water, and beach water, respectively. In contrast, 50.4% of gull isolates and 41.2% of sewage isolates were unique strain types. River water, which is expected to contain E. coli strains from many diffuse sources of nonpoint source pollution, contained strains most closely associated with other river water isolates that were collected at different sites or on different days. However, river sites impacted by sewage discharge had approximately 20% more strains similar to sewage isolates than did sites impacted by stormwater alone. Beach sites with known gull fecal contamination contained E. coli most similar to other beach isolates rather than gull isolates collected at these same sites, indicating underrepresentation of possible gull strains. These results suggest large numbers of strains are needed to represent contributing host sources within a geographical location. Additionally, environmental survival may influence the composition of strains that can be recovered from contaminated waters. Understanding the ecology of indicator bacteria is important when interpreting fecal pollution assessments and developing source detection methodology.

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Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Assessment of sampling saturation of possible E. coli strains from host and environmental groups. A rarefaction curve was generated from iterative sampling using EcoSim software (16) to determine the abundance of strain types found in each group (gulls, sewage, stormwater, river, or beach) for the number of strains sampled. Third-order regression lines calculated using all data points were r2 = >0.99 for all five series.

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