Title of article :
Fecal bacteria in the rivers of the Seine drainage network
(France): Sources, fate and modelling
Author/Authors :
Pierre Servais، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Tamara Garcia-Armisen a، نويسنده , , Isabelle George، نويسنده , , 1، نويسنده , , Gilles Billen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The Seine river watershed (France) is a deeply anthropogenically impacted area, due to the high population density, intense
industrial activities and intensive agriculture. The water quality and ecological functioning of the different rivers of the Seine
drainage network have been extensively studied during the last fifteen years within the framework of a large French
multidisciplinary scientific program (PIREN Seine program). This paper presents a synthesis of the main data gained in the scope
of this program concerning the microbiological water contamination of the rivers of the Seine drainage network. The more common
indicator of fecal contamination (fecal coliforms) was mainly used; some complementary works used E. coli and intestinal
enterococci as alternative fecal indicators. Point sources (outfall of wastewater treatment plants) and non point sources (surface
runoff and soil leaching) of fecal pollution to the rivers of the watershed were quantified. Results showed that, at the scale of a large
urbanised watershed as the Seine basin, the input of fecal micro-organisms by non-point sources is much lower than the inputs by
point sources. However, the local impact of diffuse non-human sources (especially surface runoff of pastured fields) can be of
major importance on the microbiological quality of small headwater rivers. Fecal contamination of the main rivers of the Seine
watershed (Seine, Marne, Oise rivers) was studied showing high level of microbiological pollution when compared to European
guidelines for bathing waters. The strong negative impact of treated wastewater effluents outfall on the microbiological quality of
receiving rivers was observed in different areas of the watershed. Once released in rivers, culturable fecal bacteria disappeared
relatively rapidly due to mortality (protozoan grazing, lysis) or loss of culturability induced by stress conditions (sunlight effect,
nutrient concentration, temperature). Mortality rates of E. coli were studied in different types of rivers within the watershed
showing, in summer conditions, no major difference in the mortality rates in small and large rivers. As a result of these studies, a
module describing the dynamics of fecal bacteria has been developed and embedded within a hydro-ecological model describing
the functioning of the rivers of the whole watershed (the SENEQUE model). Once validated, such a model can be used for testing
predictive scenarios and thus can be a very useful tool for the management of microbiological water quality at the scale of the
whole basin.
Keywords :
Urban wastewater , fecal coliforms , Escherichia coli , seine , Soil leaching , Fecal indicators , microbiology , Modelling
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment