Science Inventory

Resilience of microbial communities in a simulated drinking water distribution system subjected to disturbances: role of conditionally rare taxa and potential implications for antibiotic-resistant bacteria

Citation:

Gomez-Alvarez, V., S. Pfaller, J. Pressman, D. Wahman, AND R. Revetta. Resilience of microbial communities in a simulated drinking water distribution system subjected to disturbances: role of conditionally rare taxa and potential implications for antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology. Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, Uk, 2(4):645-657, (2016).

Impact/Purpose:

This study demonstrated that DWDS microbial communities are sensitive to changes in operational parameters (i.e., nitrification, disinfectant residual) and respond to a disturbance by returning to its stable state after a shift in community composition (i.e., resilience). The information generated in this study improves our understanding of the drinking water exposome, particularly the potential sources of adverse exposure (unintended consequences of disinfectant switching practices) and how these sources may be monitored to ensure public and ecosystem health.

Description:

Many US water utilities using chloramine as their secondary disinfectant have experienced nitrification episodes that detrimentally impact water quality in their distribution systems. A semi-closed pipe-loop chloraminated drinking water distribution system (DWDS) simulator was used to evaluate the biological stability of the system and describe the response of microbial communities in the bulk water (BW) and biofilm (BF) phase to a disturbance caused by changes in the operational parameters. The DWDS simulator was operated through five successive operational schemes, including an episode of nitrification, followed by a ‘chlorine burn’ by switching disinfectant from chloramine to free chlorine. Community comparisons showed significant differences in the taxonomic structure based on disinfectant and phase (e.g., BW and BF). Both disturbances created changes in the relative abundances of the core microbiome and some members of the rare biosphere (i.e., conditionally rare taxa); however, the microbial community was resilient and returned to its stable state. Genes associated with multiple antibiotic resistance mechanisms were found to be a component of the core genomes of waterborne isolates. These results provide evidence of variations in the bulk water/biofilm microbial community structure during episodes of disturbance (e.g., disinfectant switching practices, nitrification) and their recovery after disturbance.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:07/01/2016
Record Last Revised:10/28/2016
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 329550