Applied & Environmental Microbiology: Occurrence of Fecal Indicator Bateria in Surface Waters and the Subsurface Aquifer in Key Largo, Fl. by J. Paul, et. al.

 
APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, June 1995, p. 2235–2241 Vol. 61, No. 610q 1995, American Society for Microbiology
JOHN H. PAUL,
 Department of Marine Science, University of South Florida,
 Center for Coastal Geology,
Received 17 January 1995/Accepted 20 March 1995
 1 and U.S. Geological Survey2 St. Petersburg, Florida 33701 
 
Sewage waste disposal facilities in the Florida Keys include septic tanks and individual package plants in place of municipal collection facilities in most locations. In Key Largo, both facilities discharge into the extremely porous Key Largo limestone. To determine whether there was potential contamination of the subsurface aquifer and nearby coastal surface waters by such waste disposal practices, we examined the presence of microbial indicators commonly found in sewage (fecal coliforms, Clostridium perfringens, and enterococci) and aquatic microbial parameters (viral direct counts, bacterial direct counts, chlorophyll a, and marine vibrophage) in injection well effluent, monitoring well s that followed a transect from onshore to offshore, and surface waters above these wells in two separate locations in Key Largo in August 1993 and March 1994. Effluent and waters from onshore shallow monitoring wells (1.8- to 3.7-m depth) contained two or all three of the fecal indicators in all three samples taken, whereas deeper wells (10.7- to 12.2-m depth) at these same sites contained few or none. The presence of fecal indicators was found in two of five near shore wells (i.e., those that were <1.8 miles [ <2.9 km] from shore), whereas offshore wells ( >2.1 to 5.7 miles].

1* JOAN B. ROSE,1 SUNNY JIANG,1 CHRIS KELLOGG,1 AND EUGENE A. SHINN2

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