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Article Dans Une Revue Environmental Technology Année : 2011

Annual and nycthemeral studies of the survival and circulation of indicator bacteria in a schist aquifer

Résumé

Escherichia coli and Enterococci are widely used as indicators of faecal contamination of groundwater while total coliforms, which are of environmental but also of faecal origin, are indicators of the overall quality of the water. The survival of bacteria in groundwater is dependent on many factors including temperature, competition with indigenous bacteria and entrapment in aquifer material. Previous studies showed two sources of faecal contamination of a schist aquifer: infiltration into the ground from nearby septic tank effluents and seepage of landfill leachate. Water samples for bacterial analysis were collected from a piezometer on a monthly basis (15 months) and every six hours over two non-consecutive days. The intermittent sampling showed relatively stable concentrations of bacteria over time after the removal of stagnant water. Therefore, a continuous bacterial contamination without significant daily variation exists. The ratio of E. coli densities to total coliforms densities (EC/TC) allowed differentiation between the sources of faecal pollution in groundwater by comparing the populations of faecal bacteria with those of environmental bacteria. Enumeration indicated that the densities of bacteria were much higher in this schist aquifer than those in alluvial aquifers contaminated by a septic tank reported in the literature.
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Dates et versions

hal-00687375 , version 1 (13-04-2012)

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Elise Grisey, Emilien Belle, Jacques Mudry, Lotfi Aleya. Annual and nycthemeral studies of the survival and circulation of indicator bacteria in a schist aquifer. Environmental Technology, 2011, 32 (10), pp.1131-1139. ⟨10.1080/09593330.2010.528044⟩. ⟨hal-00687375⟩
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