Top Banner
Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases
31

Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Fay Douglas
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Water Microbiology

• Tap (drinking) water• Surface water (freshwater)• Waste water• (Marine water)• Water borne diseases

Page 2: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Tap water (drinking water)

• Optimum = no microorganisms • Microbial quality determination • Faecal coliforms, Escherichia coli – indicator

of fresh faecal contamination (cultivation 43°C)

• Coliforms - indicator of total faecal contamination (includes faecal coliforms) = “total coliforms”

Page 3: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Tap water (drinking water)

• Enterococci – the third indicator of faecal contamination (metabolically LAB)

• Mesophiles – temperature optimum 20-45°C, sources: soil, faeces, plant…. (EU CFU at 36°C)

• Psychrophiles - temperature optimum <20°C, often autochthonous water microflora; source: soil (EU CFU at 22°C)

Page 4: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Tap water (drinking water)

• Clostridium perfringens – potentially pathogenic, quality indicator for processing from surface water

• Pseudomonas aeruginosa - potentially pathogenic, (CR bottled water)

• Disinfection: Ag, Cl, O3, UV radiation

Page 5: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

MICROBIOLOGICAL STANDARDS FOR DRINKING WATER

• Total plate counts• < 200 cfu/ml at 22oC• < 100 cfu/ml at 36oC• E. coli, coliforms• Absence from 100 ml• Enterococci (faecal streptococci)• Absence from 100 ml• Nitrates (NO3

-)

• < 50 mg/l (adults)• < 15 mg/l (infants)

Page 6: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Surface water (freshwater)

• Regularly contaminated• Number of bacteria very fluctuable• 10 – 109 /ml• Plankton = communities in water

(bacterioplankton + zooplankton + phytoplankton

Page 7: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Surface water (freshwater)

• Saprobity = the level of surface water quality, determined by:

• Organic matter content• Density of microorganisms• Character of processes (aerobic, anaerobic)• Level of solved oxygen• Biological oxygen demand (BOD)

Page 8: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Surface water (freshwater)

• Oligotrophic water: • no organic mater, • low (no) number of microorganisms – close

to drinking water, • fully saturated with oxygen, • aerobic processes, • good water for plenty organisms

Page 9: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Surface water (freshwater)

• Eutrophic (polysaprobic) –• very high level of organic mater, very high

microorganisms number , nearly no oxygen, • anaerobic processes, • nearly no higher organisms• Mesotrophic (mesosaprobic)– medium level

of contamination and others factors, water acceptable for several organisms

Page 10: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 11: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 12: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 13: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Biofilm formation

Page 14: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Marine Water – „A High Pressure Refrigerator“

Page 15: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 16: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 17: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 18: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Figure 11A. Generalized plan of a secondary sewage treatment plant using either (or both) an ACTIVATED SLUDGE or a TRICKLING FILTER SYSTEM. Note the direction of flow of the various sludges and effluents. If you can draw this plan from memory and describe what each component's purpose is, you qualify for the SEWAGE EXPERT gold star and will surely score well on the final exam.

Wastewater Treatment

Wastewater Treatment Plant

Page 19: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Wastewater TreatmentActivated sludge tank

Trickling filter system

Page 20: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 21: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Aerobic Degradation of Biodegradable Organic Matter (BOM)

• aerobic microbes

• BOM CO2, nitrate,sulphate, phophate (mineralization)

Page 22: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 23: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 24: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 25: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 26: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.
Page 27: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Water Borne Diseases

• Cholera (Vibrio cholerae), enterotoxin, diarrhea, oral rehydration therapy

• Salmonelosis (Salmonella enterica Enteritidis)• Shigellosis (Shigella dysenteri)• Traveler´s diarrhea (Escherichia coli)• Helicobacter pylori• Hepatitis A long incubation period

Page 28: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Water Borne Diseases

• Legionella pneumophila• Pseudomonas aeruginosa

• Hepatitis A long incubation period• Giardia lamblia, G. Intestinalis, endemic in US• Entamoeba histolytica• Cyclospora cayetanenis

Page 29: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Summary of Water Borne Diseases

• WBDs are transmitted almost entirely true facal contaminated water

• Prevention: proper sanitation procedures (minimizing faecal pollution, washing hands, traetment of polluted water)

Page 30: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.

Many rural areas in Cambodia show high rates of waterborne and water related diseases

Page 31: Water Microbiology Tap (drinking) water Surface water (freshwater) Waste water (Marine water) Water borne diseases.