Bacterial nutrients in drinking water

Author:

LeChevallier M W1,Schulz W1,Lee R G1

Affiliation:

1. Belleville Laboratory, American Water Works Service Co., Inc., Illinois 62220.

Abstract

Regrowth of coliform bacteria in distribution systems has been a problem for a number of water utilities. Efforts to solve the regrowth problem have not been totally successful. The current project, which was conducted at the New Jersey American Water Co.-Swimming River Treatment Plant, showed that the occurrence of coliform bacteria in the distribution system could be associated with rainfall, water temperatures greater than 15 degrees C, total organic carbon levels greater than 2.4 mg/liter, and assimilable organic carbon levels greater than 50 micrograms of acetate carbon equivalents per liter. A multiple linear regression model based on free chlorine residuals present in dead-end sections of the distribution system and temperature predicted 83.8% of the heterotrophic plate count bacterial variation. To limit the growth of coliform bacteria in drinking water, the study concludes that assimilable organic carbon levels should be reduced to less than 50 micrograms/liter.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference10 articles.

1. American Public Health Association. 1985. Standard methods for the examination of water and wastewater 16th ed. American Public Health Association Washington D.C.

2. Bordner R. and J. Winter (ed.). 1978. Microbiological methods for monitoring the environment. EPA-600/8-78-017. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Cincinnati.

3. Characklis W. G. D. Goodman W. A. Hunt and G. A. McFeters. 1988. Bacterial regrowth in distribution systems. American Water Works Association Research Foundation Denver.

4. Gaidish T. J. R. L. Calderon and J. G. Grochowski. 1987. Abstr. Annu. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol. 1987 N-31 p. 249.

5. Examination and characterization of distribution system biofilms;LeChevallier M. W.;Appl. Environ. Microbiol.,1987

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