Disruptive effects of sewage intrusion into drinking water: Microbial succession and organic transformation at molecular level

  • Mengqing Fan
  • , Anran Ren
  • , Mingchen Yao
  • , Xiaoming Li
  • , Walter van der Meer
  • , Guo Yu
  • , Gertjan Medema
  • , Joan Rose
  • , Gang Liu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    14 Citations (Scopus)
    4 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Drinking water distribution systems are increasingly vulnerable to sewage intrusion due to aging water infrastructure and intensifying water stress. While the health risks associated with sewage intrusion have been extensively studied, little is known about the impacts of intruded bacteria and dissolved organic matter (DOM) on microbiology in drinking water. In this dynamic study, we demonstrate that the intrusion of 1 % sewage into tap water resulted in immediate contamination, including an 8-fold increase in biomass (TCC), a 48.9 % increase in bacterial species (ASVs), a 12.5 % increase in organic carbon content (DOC), and a 13.5 % increase in unique DOM molecular formulae. Over time, sewage intrusion altered tap water microbiology by accelerating bacterial growth rates (5-fold faster), selectively promoting ASVs in community succession, and producing 998 more unique DOM formulae. More significantly, statistical analysis revealed that the intrusion of 1 % sewage shifted the driving force of bacterial and DOM composition covariance from a DOM-dependent process in tap water to a bacterial-governed process post-intrusion. Our results clearly demonstrate the disruptive effects of sewage intrusion into tap water, emphasizing the urgent need to consider the long-lasting impacts of sewage intrusion in drinking water distribution systems, in addition to its immediate health risks.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number122281
    JournalWater research
    Volume266
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 Nov 2024

    Keywords

    • Bacterial growth
    • Disruptive effects
    • Dissolved organic matter
    • Drinking water
    • Sewage intrusion

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