Escherichia coli and Enterococci at Beaches in the Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Michigan:  Sources, Characteristics, and Environmental Pathways

Sheridan K. Haack,* Lisa R. Fogarty, and Christopher Wright§
U.S. Geological Survey, 6520 Mercantile Way, Suite 5, Lansing, Michigan, 48911, and The Watershed Center, Grand Traverse Bay, 232 East Front Street, Traverse City, Michigan 49684
Environ. Sci. Technol., 2003, 37 (15), pp 3275–3282
DOI: 10.1021/es021062n
Publication Date (Web): July 8, 2003
Copyright © 2003 American Chemical Society
*

 Corresponding author phone:  (517)887-8909; fax:  (517)887-8937; e-mail:  skhaack@usgs.gov.

,

 U.S. Geological Survey.

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 The Watershed Center.

,
§

 Present address:  Michigan State University, Department of Agricultural Economics, 202 Agriculture Hall, East Lansing, MI, 48824.

Abstract

This study quantified Escherichia coli (EC) and enterococci (ENT) in beach waters and dominant source materials, correlated these with ambient conditions, and determined selected EC genotypes and ENT phenotypes. Bathing-water ENT criteria were exceeded more frequently than EC criteria, providing conflicting interpretations of water quality. Dominant sources of EC and ENT were bird feces (108/d/bird), storm drains (107/d), and river water (1011/d); beach sands, shallow groundwater and detritus were additional sources. Beach-water EC genotypes and ENT phenotypes formed clusters with those from all source types, reflecting diffuse inputs. Some ENT isolates had phenotypes similar to those of human pathogens and/or exhibited high-level resistance to human-use antibiotics. EC and ENT concentrations were influenced by collection time and wind direction. There was a 48−72-h lag between rainfall and elevated EC concentrations at three southern shoreline beaches, but no such lag at western and eastern shoreline beaches, reflecting the influence of beach orientation with respect to cyclic (3−5 d) summer weather patterns. In addition to local contamination sources and processes, conceptual or predictive models of Great Lakes beach water quality should consider regional weather patterns, lake hydrodynamics, and the influence of monitoring method variables (time of day, frequency).

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History

  • Published In Issue August 01, 2003
  • Received for review December 10, 2002
    Revised manuscript received May 21, 2003
    Accepted May 21, 2003

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