2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2018.12.058
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Occurrence of coliphage in raw wastewater and in ambient water: A meta-analysis

Abstract: Coliphage have been proposed as indicators of fecal contamination in recreational waters because they better reflect the persistence of pathogenic viruses in the environment and through wastewater treatment than traditional fecal indicator bacteria. Herein, we conducted a systematic literature search of peer-reviewed publications to identify coliphage density data (somatic and male-specific, or MSC) in raw wastewater and ambient waters. The literature review inclusion criteria included scope, study quality, an… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Associations between indicators and pathogens in surface water have been largely inconsistent, although empirical determination of these relationships is challenged by the limitations of direct pathogen detection; associations are more commonly observed among more frequently detected organisms [ 27 , 36 ]. Microbial occurrence is more consistent in feces and particularly in sewage, which smooths the high individual variability in fecal microbe shedding by representing the combined fecal inputs of populations [ 177 , 178 , 180 182 ]. Despite less frequent detection of alternative indicators in recreational waters [ 27 ], high concentrations of multiple human-associated markers have been reported worldwide in both raw and biologically treated wastewater [ 83 •].…”
Section: Health Relevance and Protectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Associations between indicators and pathogens in surface water have been largely inconsistent, although empirical determination of these relationships is challenged by the limitations of direct pathogen detection; associations are more commonly observed among more frequently detected organisms [ 27 , 36 ]. Microbial occurrence is more consistent in feces and particularly in sewage, which smooths the high individual variability in fecal microbe shedding by representing the combined fecal inputs of populations [ 177 , 178 , 180 182 ]. Despite less frequent detection of alternative indicators in recreational waters [ 27 ], high concentrations of multiple human-associated markers have been reported worldwide in both raw and biologically treated wastewater [ 83 •].…”
Section: Health Relevance and Protectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite less frequent detection of alternative indicators in recreational waters [ 27 ], high concentrations of multiple human-associated markers have been reported worldwide in both raw and biologically treated wastewater [ 83 •]. Meta-analyses have also found high coliphage and norovirus densities in raw sewage around the world [ 178 , 180 ]. A wide range of pathogens have frequently been detected in stormwater, though with greater variability and typically at lower concentrations than in sewage [ 179 ].…”
Section: Health Relevance and Protectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In response to these limitations, rapid molecular biology-based technologies that can measure enterococci and E. coli in a matter of hours, offering the option for same-day water quality notification, have been developed (10)(11)(12). Other researchers are investigating the use of viral cultures for surface water quality monitoring that target somatic and F ϩ coliphages (13)(14)(15)(16). Coliphage monitoring may offer a more public health-protective approach due to the increased similarities of coliphages to enteric viral pathogens in morphology, inactivation in the environment, and persistence during treatment (17)(18)(19).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Currently, human enteric viruses cause a significant fraction of the disease burden related to wastewater pollution worldwide. Direct and indirect wastewater reuse (e.g., agricultural irrigation, recreational activities in contaminated surface waters) represents a public health risk; thus, the microbial quality of WWTP effluent should be monitored to manage those risks (11,12).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%