Affiliation:
1. Department of Environment and Resource Management, 80 Meiers Road, Indooroopilly, Brisbane 4068, Queensland, Australia
2. School of Urban Development, Queensland University of Technology, GPO Box 2434, Brisbane 4001, Queensland, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A total of 214 rainwater samples from 82 tanks were collected in urban Southeast Queensland (SEQ) in Australia and analyzed for the presence and numbers of zoonotic bacterial and protozoal pathogens using binary PCR and quantitative PCR (qPCR). Quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) analysis was used to quantify the risk of infection associated with the exposure to potential pathogens from roof-harvested rainwater used as potable or nonpotable water. Of the 214 samples tested, 10.7%, 9.8%, 5.6%, and 0.4% were positive for the
Salmonella invA
,
Giardia lamblia
β-giardin,
Legionella pneumophila mip
, and
Campylobacter jejuni mapA
genes, respectively.
Cryptosporidium parvum
oocyst wall protein (COWP) could not be detected. The estimated numbers of
Salmonella
,
G. lamblia
, and
L. pneumophila
organisms ranged from 6.5 × 10
1
to 3.8 × 10
2
cells, 0.6 × 10° to 3.6 × 10° cysts, and 6.0 × 10
1
to 1.7 × 10
2
cells per 1,000 ml of water, respectively. Six risk scenarios were considered for exposure to
Salmonella
spp.,
G. lamblia
, and
L. pneumophila
. For
Salmonella
spp. and
G. lamblia
, these scenarios were (i) liquid ingestion due to drinking of rainwater on a daily basis, (ii) accidental liquid ingestion due to hosing twice a week, (iii) aerosol ingestion due to showering on a daily basis, and (iv) aerosol ingestion due to hosing twice a week. For
L. pneumophila
, these scenarios were (i) aerosol inhalation due to showering on a daily basis and (ii) aerosol inhalation due to hosing twice a week. The risk of infection from
Salmonella
spp.,
G. lamblia
, and
L. pneumophila
associated with the use of rainwater for showering and garden hosing was calculated to be well below the threshold value of one extra infection per 10,000 persons per year in urban SEQ. However, the risk of infection from ingesting
Salmonella
spp. and
G. lamblia
via drinking exceeded this threshold value and indicated that if undisinfected rainwater is ingested by drinking, then the incidences of the gastrointestinal diseases salmonellosis and giardiasis are expected to range from 9.8 × 10° to 5.4 × 10
1
(with a mean of 1.2 × 10
1
from Monte Carlo analysis) and from 1.0 × 10
1
to 6.5 × 10
1
cases (with a mean of 1.6 × 10
1
from Monte Carlo analysis) per 10,000 persons per year, respectively, in urban SEQ. Since this health risk seems higher than that expected from the reported incidences of gastroenteritis, the assumptions used to estimate these infection risks are critically examined. Nonetheless, it would seem prudent to disinfect rainwater for use as potable water.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology