The use of F-specific coliphages to assess effluent treatment and reuse schemes


Autoria(s): Chinigasagam, H.N.; Gardner, E.A.; Sands, J.; Blackall, P.J.
Data(s)

01/05/2008

Resumo

This study reports on the use of naturally occurring F-specific coliphages, as well as spiked MS-2 phage, to evaluate a land-based effluent treatment/reuse system and an effluent irrigation scheme. Both the natural phages and the spiked MS-2 phage indicated that the effluent treatment/reuse system (FILTER - Filtration and Irrigated cropping for Land Treatment and Effluent Reuse) achieved a reduction in phage levels over the treatment system by one to two log10. FILTER reduced natural F-specific phage numbers from around 103 to below 102 100-ml-1 and the spiked phage from 105 to around 104 100-ml-1 (incoming compared with outgoing water). In the effluent irrigation scheme, phage spiked into the holding ponds dropped from 106 to 102 100-ml-1 after 168 h (with no detectable levels of natural F-specific phage being found prior to spiking). Only low levels of the spiked phage (102 gm-1) could be recovered from soil irrigated with phage-spiked effluent (at 106 phage 100 ml-1) or from fruits (around 102 phage per fruit) that had direct contact with soil which had been freshly irrigated with the same phage-spiked effluent.

Identificador

Chinigasagam, H.N. and Gardner, E.A. and Sands, J. and Blackall, P.J. (2008) The use of F-specific coliphages to assess effluent treatment and reuse schemes. Environmental Technology, 29 (5). pp. 515-524.

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/851/

Publicador

Informaworld

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09593330801984795

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/851/

Palavras-Chave #Technology (General) #Irrigation farming #Microbiology
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed