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Citation

Christenson, Elizabeth; Wickersham, Lindsay; Jacob, Megan; & Stewart, Jill R. (2022). A Watershed Study Assessing Effects of Commercial Hog Operations on Microbial Water Quality in North Carolina, USA. Science of The Total Environment, 838(Pt. 2), 156085.

Abstract

Commercial Hog Operations (CHOs) produce large amounts of fecal waste, which is often treated in lagoons and sprayed onto fields as fertilizer. The effects of these systems on proximal water quality compared to ambient conditions have not been well-studied, and are particularly important for understanding the dissemination of fecal bacteria and antimicrobial resistance. A longitudinal, case-control watershed study was designed to study effects of CHOs on microbial water quality among watersheds with similar soil, land use, human population, and area. We compared watersheds with (n = 13) and without (n = 9) CHOs over one year measuring fecal indicator bacteria (FIB), microbial source tracking (MST) fecal markers, and antimicrobial resistance in isolated Escherichia coli. E. coli concentrations were higher (p < 0.001) at sites downstream of CHOs (1284 CFU/100 mL, n = 103) compared to background sites (687 CFU/100 mL, n = 74). The human MST marker HF183 was detected at similarly low concentrations (PR = 1.3 (0.91, 1.8), p = 0.30). However, the swine MST marker pig-2-bac was found at more sites downstream of CHOs (PR = 3.5 (0.98, 12), p = 0.035) and at a significantly higher (p = 0.003) mean concentration at sites downstream of CHOs (283 copies/mL) compared to background sites (0.76 copies/mL). The presence of any antimicrobial resistance was observed more often for E. coli isolated downstream from CHOs (19%, n = 556) than background sites (6%, n = 356), with tetracycline resistance observed most often. Nine isolates from four sites downstream of CHOs and one isolate from a background site were confirmed

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156085

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Science of The Total Environment

Author(s)

Christenson, Elizabeth
Wickersham, Lindsay
Jacob, Megan
Stewart, Jill R.

Article Type

Regular

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

North Carolina

ORCiD

Stewart, J - 0000-0002-3474-5233