Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1255
Citation Meays, CL, Broersma, K, Nordin, R, Mazumder, A and Samadpour, M. 2006. Spatial and annual variability in concentrations and sources of Escherichia coli in multiple watersheds. Environmental Science and Technology 41:5289-5296.
Organization UVic
URL http://web.uvic.ca/~h2o/publications/Meays%20et%20al.%202006%20EST.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords water quality, biological water quality, fecal coliform, wildlife, range, grazing, Nonpoint source fecal contamination is a concern for
drinking water supplies worldwide. In this study, 4812 E.
coli isolates were classified to source. Results of this
experiment show that the fecal coliform (FC) counts varied
by year, month, and site, for each of the watersheds
sampled. For both years, the lowest FC counts tended to
be at the highest elevation sites followed by the drinking
water intake sites at the lowest elevation. The highest FC
counts tended to be at the mid-elevation sites on BX,
Deer, and Duteau Creeks. The sources of E. coli varied
significantly with stream for 2003 and 2004 (P < 0.001, df)39),
although the main sources of E. coli (avian, deer/elk,
canine, rodent, bovine, and bear) tended to be similar
between watersheds. The dominant sources of E. coli
changed from 2003 (avian, deer/elk, and canine) to 2004
(avian, bovine, and rodent). It is important to look at the
results of more than 1 year of source tracking data to get
a better picture of the dominant sources within a
watershed. Overall, wildlife was the largest contributor of
E. coli to the watersheds in both 2003 (> 84%) and 2004
(>73%).
Information Type article
Regional Watershed Okanagan, Shuswap
Sub-watershed if known BX Creek, Deer Creek, Duteau Creek
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Cindy Meays
Contact Email [email protected]