Subscriber access provided by University of Newcastle, Australia
Article
Effect of low energy waves on the accumulation and transport of fecal indicator bacteria in sand and pore water at freshwater beaches Ming Zhi Wu, Denis Michael O'Carroll, Laura Jill Vogel, and Clare E. Robinson Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b05985 • Publication Date (Web): 10 Feb 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 19, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Effect of low energy waves on the accumulation and transport of fecal indicator
2
bacteria in sand and pore water at freshwater beaches
3 Ming Zhi Wua, Denis M. O’Carrolla,b, Laura J. Vogela, Clare E. Robinsona *
4 a
5 6 7 8
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Western University, London ON, Canada N6A 5B9
b
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Connected Water Initiative, University of New South Wales, Manly Vale NSW 2093, Australia
9 10
Submitted to Environmental Science & Technology
11 12
*Corresponding author
13
Address for Correspondence:
14
Clare Robinson
15
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Western University
16
London ON, Canada N6A 5B9
17
Tel: 519-661-2111; Fax: 519-661-3779
18
e-mail:
[email protected] 19
1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
20
Abstract Art
21
22 23
2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 36
Page 3 of 36
24
Environmental Science & Technology
Abstract
25
Elevated fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) in beach sand and pore water represent an
26
important non-point source of contamination to surface waters. This study examines the
27
physical processes governing the accumulation and distribution of FIB in a beach aquifer.
28
Field data indicate E. coli and enterococci can be transported 1 and 2 m, respectively, below
29
the water table. Data were used to calibrate a numerical model whereby FIB are delivered to
30
a beach aquifer by wave-induced infiltration across the beach face. Simulations indicate FIB
31
rapidly accumulate in a beach aquifer with FIB primarily associated with sand rather than
32
freely residing in the pore water. Simulated transport of E. coli in a beach aquifer is complex
33
and does not correlate with conservative tracer transport. Beaches with higher wave-induced
34
infiltration rate and vertical infiltration velocity (i.e., beaches with higher beach slope and
35
wave height, and lower terrestrial groundwater discharge) had greater E. coli accumulation
36
and E. coli was transported deeper below the beach face. For certain beach conditions, the
37
amount of FIB accumulated in sand over five to six days was found to be sufficient to trigger
38
a beach advisory if eroded to surface water.
39 40 41
Keywords: Groundwater-surface water interactions, fecal contamination, bacterial transport, colloid transport, waves, Escherichia coli, enterococci
3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
42
1
Introduction
43
Fecal contamination diminishes the recreational and economic value of beaches.1,2 It
44
is estimated that human exposure to wastewater-polluted coastal waters worldwide results in
45
over 120 million cases of gastrointestinal disease and 50 million cases of respiratory disease
46
annually.3 Recreational water quality is assessed through routine monitoring of fecal indicator
47
bacteria (FIB), i.e., Escherichia coli at freshwater beaches and enterococci at marine beaches,
48
which correlate with the risk of water-borne illnesses to beachgoers. When FIB
49
concentrations in surface water exceed water quality standards (e.g., 100 colony forming
50
units per 100 mL [CFU/100 mL] based on a geometric mean for E. coli in Ontario, Canada4
51
and the United States5; 30 CFU/100 mL for enterococci in the United States5), a beach water
52
quality advisory may be issued. FIB are known to accumulate in foreshore sand and pore
53
water (herein referred to as the foreshore reservoir; Figure 1a), with concentrations
54
considered on a bulk volumetric basis often orders of magnitude higher than in adjacent
55
surface waters.6-10 Fecal contaminants in the foreshore reservoir pose a human health risk
56
through skin contact and ingestion,11,12 as well as being an important non-point source of
57
contamination to surface waters.6,13-16 Sources of FIB to the foreshore reservoir include
58
stormwater runoff, septic systems, sewer overflows and repeated seeding from bird and
59
animal feces.6,17-19 Infiltration of surface water across the beach face (Figure 1a) can also be
60
an important source of FIB to the foreshore reservoir.20-22
61
Prior research on the exchange of FIB between the foreshore reservoir and surface
62
water has largely focused on release of FIB from the reservoir to surface water.7,23,24 Few
63
studies have evaluated the delivery of FIB to the foreshore reservoir from surface water
64
infiltration. Due to the complexity of the beach environment (e.g., multiple forcing acting at
65
different temporal and spatial scales) it is difficult to quantify the exchange of FIB between
66
the foreshore reservoir and surface water via field measurements alone.6,24 Gast et al.25 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 36
Page 5 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
67
showed that plastic microspheres, used as a proxy for enterococci, were rapidly transported
68
about 0.5 – 0.8 m vertically and 6 m horizontally into the groundwater and unsaturated zone
69
of a beach aquifer in response to tide- and wave-induced surface water infiltration. More
70
recently, Brown et al.19 showed that while recirculating surface water may transport FIB from
71
bird feces deposited on the beach surface into the foreshore reservoir, subsequent FIB
72
transport from the reservoir to surface water (via groundwater flow) may be low due to FIB
73
attachment to sand grains. While studies have illustrated the importance of water exchange
74
(infiltration/exfiltration) across the beach face on the delivery of FIB to the foreshore
75
reservoir, improved understanding of the physical mechanisms controlling the transport of
76
FIB from surface water to the reservoir and their subsequent accumulation is needed.
77
Water exchange across the beach face and groundwater flow patterns are complex and
78
dynamic. At freshwater (e.g., Great Lakes) and micro-tidal marine beaches, waves are the
79
dominant coastal forcing and typically govern water exchange rates and beach groundwater
80
flow patterns. Averaged over a wave period, instantaneous waves produce an onshore upward
81
tilt of the sea or lake water surface (termed wave setup; Figure 1a). The hydraulic gradient
82
associated with wave setup drives groundwater flow recirculation that extends from the wave
83
run-up zone to offshore (Figure 1a).26,27 This causes significant quantities of surface water
84
and associated constituents, including FIB, to be delivered and transported through the beach
85
aquifer.26,28,29 Prior studies have quantified wave-induced water exchange and recirculation
86
for both steady and transient wave conditions as well as their impact on conservative and
87
reactive solute transport.26,28,30,31 Numerical modelling approaches are often used to identify
88
key mechanisms governing the effect of waves on groundwater flow and solute transport due
89
to the complexity of the environment.26,30,31
90
Understanding the processes governing bacterial transport in a beach aquifer is
91
important not only for FIB but also for other bacteria including pathogenic, sulfate-reducing 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
92
and nitrifying bacteria.32 The transport of bacteria in groundwater is governed by bacteria-
93
sediment interactions including attachment to sand grains and straining.33-35 Bacteria also
94
experience inactivation and die-off, grazing, and possible replication.36-39 While prior studies
95
have examined the environmental factors affecting the persistence of FIB in beach
96
sand,10,38,40-42 the physical transport processes are less understood. For instance, we do not
97
understand the time scale at which FIB build up in the foreshore reservoir from surface water
98
infiltration, the partitioning of FIB between pore water and sand, and the physical factors
99
controlling the spatial distribution of FIB in the reservoir.
100
The objective of this study is to generate a mechanistic understanding of the effects of
101
low energy waves on the delivery, accumulation and distribution of bacteria, specifically FIB,
102
in the saturated portion of a beach aquifer. This study focuses on low energy waves which are
103
likely to lead to the accumulation of FIB in the beach aquifer, rather than higher energy
104
waves which may be erosive and thus associated with the release of FIB from the foreshore
105
reservoir to surface waters.43,44 Field data of FIB distributions in the beach aquifer at two
106
freshwater beaches with different groundwater flow conditions are first analysed. A
107
numerical model that simulates wave-induced groundwater flows combined with bacterial
108
transport is then presented with the numerical approach calibrated using the field data.
109
Finally, the model is applied to provide key insights into the physical controls on the
110
accumulation and distribution of FIB in a foreshore beach aquifer.
111
2
112
Materials and Methods 2.1
Field Sites
113
Field investigations were conducted at Burlington Beach (43°18’47”N, 79°48’02”W;
114
Lake Ontario) and Mountain View Beach (44°40’21”N, 79°58’58”W, Lake Huron).
115
Groundwater, surface water and sand surface levels were measured three times at each beach
116
from May – September 2013 to determine the groundwater hydraulic gradients and beach 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 36
Page 7 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
117
topography (see Supporting Information Section 1 for field methods). Burlington Beach is a
118
fine sand beach (median grain size diameter [d50] = 0.23 mm, uniformity coefficient [Cu] =
119
1.7, saturated hydraulic conductivity [Ks] = 19.4 m/d) with an average beach slope (β) of
120
approximately 0.05. The beach water table was relatively deep with groundwater flowing
121
landward (foreshore hydraulic gradient ranged from -0.005 to -0.01 from May – September).
122
Mountain View Beach had a shallower water table with lakeward groundwater flow
123
(foreshore hydraulic gradient ranged from 0.008 to 0.016 from May – September) and an
124
average beach slope of 0.03. This beach is comprised of fine sand (d50 = 0.23 mm, Cu = 2.3,
125
Ks = 17.8 m/d) that overlies a clay layer. Offshore the depth of the clay layer is approximately
126
1.5 m below the sediment surface.
127
Water and Sand Sampling and FIB Enumeration
2.2
128
Depth profiles of FIB concentrations in the pore water were measured at multiple
129
locations along a cross-shore transect at each beach (6 August and 9 September 2013 at
130
Burlington Beach, and 25 July 2013 at Mountain View Beach). Intact sand cores up to 0.8 m
131
deep and extending below the water table were also collected on 4 June 2013 at Mountain
132
View Beach. In addition, foreshore pore water and sand samples as well as surface water
133
samples were collected every 2 – 4 weeks at three and four cross-shore transects (50 m apart)
134
on Mountain View Beach and Burlington Beach, respectively, from May – September 2013.
135
E. coli and enterococci in water and sand samples were enumerated using standard
136
membrance filtration methods45 with bacteria extracted from sand using methods
137
recommended by Boehm et al.46 The sampling and FIB enumeration methods are further
138
described in Supporting Information Section 1. E. coli and enterococci concentrations are
139
expressed as log CFU/100mL for water samples and log CFU/g of dry sand (based on sand
140
moisture content). The log transformed FIB concentrations were used for the statistical
141
analysis. 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
142
2.3
Numerical Model
143
Groundwater flows and bacterial fate and transport in a beach aquifer exposed to
144
steady low energy waves was simulated in the finite-element solver COMSOL Multiphysics
145
(version 4.4).47 Variably saturated groundwater flow in a beach aquifer was simulated using
146
the Richards equation.48 Bacterial fate and transport in the beach aquifer included die-off and
147
attachment of bacteria to sand grains simulated using colloid filtration theory (CFT).49 Given
148
parameter values are better defined for E. coli compared to other FIB, the transport of E. coli
149
was simulated with enterococci transport simulated for select cases. Key model parameter
150
values are shown in Table 1 with details of the mathematical model and additional parameter
151
values provided in Supporting Information Section 2. Note, some field results are described
152
in this section as they are important for explaining the model set-up.
153
Two-dimensional models were set up to simulate the beach aquifers at Burlington
154
Beach and Mountain View Beach (Figure 1b,c). The model simulates the delivery of FIB to
155
the beach aquifer by surface water infiltration driven by low energy waves. Once delivered to
156
the aquifer, FIB may be transported by the flowing groundwater, accumulate in the sand, die-
157
off or exfiltrate to surface water. The effect of waves was simulated by considering the phase-
158
averaged effect of waves as described by wave setup (eq S8 in the Supporting Information),
159
rather than simulating instantaneous wave action. Submerged nodes along the boundary BCD
160
(Figure 1b) were assigned a hydrostatic pressure corresponding to the wave setup profile.
161
Nodes landward of the wave setup point along BCD were unsaturated and represented as a
162
no-flow boundary. As there was no infiltration landward of the wave setup point, the majority
163
of FIB was transported in fully saturated pores in our domain.
164
The simulated lake E. coli concentration was determined as part of the model
165
calibration with a constant concentration applied for nodes along boundary BCD with
166
infiltration into the aquifer as determined by the steady state flow model (Figure 1b). A zero 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 36
Page 9 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
167
concentration gradient was applied for nodes with exfiltration. The first-order die-off rate
168
coefficient µdec for FIB was estimated based on an average value determined from microcosm
169
experiments conducted using foreshore sand from Burlington Beach.50 Given die-off rates for
170
both FIB in water and sediment often have similar ranges [O(0.01-1) 1/d],51-55 the same µdec
171
was assumed for FIB in the aqueous phase and those attached to sand. The FIB concentration
172
in the terrestrial groundwater (Qt) was zero based on negligible FIB detected in the landward
173
groundwater at each site (Figure S2). The initial FIB concentration in the beach aquifer was
174
set to zero. This assumes that all FIB in the beach aquifer were released to surface water by a
175
preceding period of high erosive wave conditions.44 Details of the model domain and the flow
176
boundary conditions including wave setup are described in Supporting Information Section 2.
177
A simulation time of 5 days was adopted. This corresponds to the average time between
178
periods of higher wave activity on Lake Huron.
179
The bacterial attachment efficiency (αtot) and lake E. coli concentration were
180
determined by fitting model simulations (after 5 days simulation time) to the observed E. coli
181
vertical travel distance (Figure S2) and the observed mean E. coli saturated sand
182
concentrations at the two beaches (Figures S3 and S4). The possible range of αtot for E. coli
183
was based on literature values (Table S3). The lake E. coli concentration was varied within
184
the range of concentrations measured in ankle-depth surface water from May – September
185
2013 (0.48-2.61 log CFU/100 mL at Burlington Beach; 0.30-2.38 log CFU/100 mL at
186
Mountain View Beach). Simulation results were consistent with the field results using αtot =
187
0.05 and a lake E. coli concentration of 1.81 log CFU/100 mL. Following calibration, a
188
sensitivity analysis was conducted to determine the physical controls on the accumulation and
189
distribution of FIB in the beach aquifer.
9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
190 191
3
Results and Discussion 3.1
Comparison Between Field and Simulated FIB Distribution
192
Consistent with prior studies,6,16,21,24 the highest concentrations of E. coli and
193
enterococci at Mountain View Beach and Burlington Beach from May – September 2013
194
were observed in the foreshore pore water, followed by surface water at ankle-depth, then at
195
waist-depth (Table 2; Figures S3 and S4). FIB concentrations were highly variable over the
196
sampling season at both beaches. E. coli and enterococci concentrations at ankle-depth and
197
waist-depth were generally similar between Mountain View Beach and Burlington Beach,
198
particularly in July through September (Figures S3c,d and S4c,d). The pore water and
199
saturated sand concentrations between the two beaches were not statistically different (pore
200
water: p = 0.34 for E. coli and p = 0.31 for enterococci; saturated sand: p = 0.11 for E. coli
201
and p = 0.15 for enterococci; Mann Whitney test). This may in part be due to the high spatial
202
heterogeneity in pore water and sand concentrations, coupled with the limited number of
203
sampling events at each beach (5 and 8 sampling events at Mountain View Beach and
204
Burlington Beach, respectively). Although the concentrations were not statistically different,
205
distinct trends are observed for saturated sand E. coli and enterococci concentrations between
206
Mountain View Beach and Burlington Beach, with concentrations typically larger at
207
Burlington Beach. At both beaches E. coli and enterococci pore water concentrations were
208
consistently higher than Ontario4 and U.S. EPA5 surface water guidelines (