287-2 Evaluating the Transport of Bacillus Subtilis Spores As a Potential Surrogate for Cryptosporidium Parvum Oocysts.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics and Hydrology
See more from this Session: Soil Physics and Hydrology Oral I

Tuesday, November 8, 2016: 1:50 PM
Phoenix Convention Center North, Room 127 A

Scott A. Bradford, 450 W Big Springs Road, USDA-ARS, Riverside, CA, Hyunjung Kim, Department of Mineral Resources and Energy Engineering, Chonbuk National University, Jeonbuk, Korea, The Republic of, Saeed Torkzaban, Land and Water, CSIRO, Glen Osmond, Australia and Brendan Headd, US Salinity Laboratory, USDA ARS, Riverside, CA
Abstract:
The USEPA has recommended the use of aerobic spores as an indicator for Cryptosporidium oocysts when determining groundwater under the direct influence of surface water.  Surface properties, interaction energies, transport, retention, and release behavior of B. subtilis spores were measured over a range of physicochemical conditions, and compared with reported information for C. parvum oocysts.  Interaction energy calculations predicted a much larger energy barrier and a shallower secondary minimum for spores than oocysts when the solution ionic strength (IS) equaled 0.1, 1 and 10 mM, and no energy barrier when the IS=100 mM.  Spores and oocysts exhibited similar trends of increasing retention with IS and decreasing Darcy water velocity (qw), and the predicted setback distance to achieve a six log removal was always larger for spores than oocysts.  However, low levels of observed spore and oocyst release significantly influenced the predicted setback distance, especially when the fraction of reversibly retained microbes (Frev) was high.  An estimate for Frev was obtained from large release pulses of spore and oocyst when the IS was reduced to deionized water.  The value of Frev always increased with qw, whereas an opposition trend for Frev with IS was observed for spores (decreasing) and oocysts (increasing).

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics and Hydrology
See more from this Session: Soil Physics and Hydrology Oral I