Science Inventory

Assessing cyanobacterial frequency and abundance at surface waters near drinking water intakes across the United States

Citation:

Coffer, M., B. Schaeffer, K. Foreman, A. Porteous, K. Loftin, R. Stumpf, P. Werdell, E. Urquhart, R. Albert, AND J. Darling. Assessing cyanobacterial frequency and abundance at surface waters near drinking water intakes across the United States. WATER RESEARCH. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, 201:117377, (2021). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2021.117377

Impact/Purpose:

Cyanobacterial blooms can negatively impact the quality of drinking water. This study offers the first large-scale analysis of cyanobacterial frequency at drinking water source waters at over 700 intakes across the United States. Data from the European Space Agency's Sentinel-3A satellite was used for the years 2017 through 2019 to assess the temporal frequency of cyanobacterial blooms at drinking water intakes, and data from the fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4) was used to compare field observations of bloom presence and absence to satellite-derived cyanobacterial abundance measurements. Results give us a better understanding of the frequency of cyanobacterial blooms in source waters for drinking water intakes across the United States and can be used to prioritize management efforts.

Description:

This study presents the first large-scale assessment of cyanobacterial frequency and abundance of surface water near drinking water intakes across the United States. Public water systems serve drinking water to nearly 90% of the United States population. Cyanobacteria and their toxins may degrade the quality of finished drinking water and can lead to negative health consequences. Satellite imagery can serve as a cost-effective and consistent monitoring technique for surface cyanobacterial blooms in source waters and can provide drinking water treatment operators information for managing their systems. This study uses satellite imagery from the European Space Agency's Ocean and Land Colour Instrument (OLCI) spanning June 2016 through April 2020. At 300-m spatial resolution, OLCI imagery can be used to monitor cyanobacteria in 685 drinking water sources across 285 lakes in 44 states, referred to here as resolvable drinking water sources. First, a subset of satellite data was compared to a subset of responses (n = 84) submitted as part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4). These UCMR 4 qualitative responses included visual observations of algal bloom presence and absence near drinking water intakes from March 2018 through November 2019. Overall agreement between satellite imagery and UCMR 4 qualitative responses was 94% with a Kappa coefficient of 0.70. Next, temporal frequency of cyanobacterial blooms at all resolvable drinking water sources was assessed. In 2019, bloom frequency averaged 2% and peaked at 100%, where 100% indicated a bloom was always present at the source waters when satellite imagery was available. Monthly cyanobacterial abundances were used to assess short-term trends across all resolvable drinking water sources and effect size was computed to provide insight on the number of years of data that must be obtained to increase confidence in an observed change. Generally, 2016 through 2020 was an insufficient time period for confidently observing changes at these source waters; on average, a decade of satellite imagery would be required for observed environmental trends to outweigh variability in the data. However, five source waters did demonstrate a sustained short-term trend, with one increasing in cyanobacterial abundance from June 2016 to April 2020 and four decreasing.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:08/01/2021
Record Last Revised:07/12/2021
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 352229