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. 2014 Feb 1:49:225-35.
doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2013.11.027. Epub 2013 Nov 27.

Molecular analysis of point-of-use municipal drinking water microbiology

Affiliations

Molecular analysis of point-of-use municipal drinking water microbiology

Eric P Holinger et al. Water Res. .

Erratum in

  • Water Res. 2014 Jun 1;56:367

Abstract

Little is known about the nature of the microbiology in tap waters delivered to consumers via public drinking water distribution systems (DWDSs). In order to establish a broader understanding of the microbial complexity of public drinking waters we sampled tap water from seventeen different cities between the headwaters of the Arkansas River and the mouth of the Mississippi River and determined the bacterial compositions by pyrosequencing small subunit rRNA genes. Nearly 98% of sequences observed among all systems fell into only 5 phyla: Proteobacteria (35%), Cyanobacteria (29%, including chloroplasts), Actinobacteria (24%, of which 85% were Mycobacterium spp.), Firmicutes (6%), and Bacteroidetes (3.4%). The genus Mycobacterium was the most abundant taxon in the dataset, detected in 56 of 63 samples (16 of 17 cities). Among the more rare phylotypes, considerable variation was observed between systems, and was sometimes associated with the type of source water, the type of disinfectant, or the concentration of the environmental pollutant nitrate. Abundant taxa (excepting Cyanobacteria and chloroplasts) were generally similar from system to system, however, regardless of source water type or local land use. The observed similarity among the abundant taxa between systems may be a consequence of the selective influence of chlorine-based disinfection and the common local environments of DWDS and premise plumbing pipes.

Keywords: Drinking water bacteria; Drinking water distribution systems; Opportunistic pathogens; Pyrosequences; Ribosomal RNA sequences.

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