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Identifying Sources of Fecal Pollution WATER RESEARCH August 2007



Please see the link to the Table of Contents
abstracts are available online

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00431354

Water Research  
Volume 41, Issue 16,  Pages 3515-3792 (August 2007)
Identifying Sources of Fecal Pollution 
Edited by Stefan Wuertz and Jennifer Field 

Reviews
Fecal source tracking, the indicator paradigm, and managing water quality
Pages 3517-3538
Katharine G. Field and Mansour Samadpour
   
Quo vadis source tracking? Towards a strategic framework for environmental monitoring of fecal pollution
Pages 3539-3552
Jorge W. Santo Domingo, Dustin G. Bambic, Thomas A. Edge and Stefan Wuertz
  
 
 Full papers 
A PCR marker for detection in surface waters of faecal pollution derived from ducks
Pages 3553-3560
Megan L. Devane, Beth Robson, Fariba Nourozi, Paula Scholes and Brent J. Gilpin

Identification of chicken-specific fecal microbial sequences using a metagenomic approach
Pages 3561-3574
Jingrang Lu, Jorge Santo Domingo and Orin C. Shanks

A comparison of ARA and DNA data for microbial source tracking based on source-classification models developed using classification trees
Pages 3575-3584
Bertram Price, Elichia Venso, Mark Frana, Joshua Greenberg and Adam Ware

Multiple lines of evidence to identify the sources of fecal pollution at a freshwater beach in Hamilton Harbour, Lake Ontario
Pages 3585-3594
Thomas A. Edge and Stephen Hill

Use of salinity mixing models to estimate the contribution of creek water fecal indicator bacteria to an estuarine environment: Newport Bay, California
Pages 3595-3604
Karen McLaughlin, Jong Ho Ahn, Rachel M. Litton and Stanley B. Grant

Identification of pets and raccoons as sources of bacterial contamination of urban storm sewers using a sequence-based bacterial source tracking method
Pages 3605-3614
Jeffrey L. Ram, Brooke Thompson, Carrie Turner, Jordan M. Nechvatal, Harry Sheehan and Janis Bobrin

Relationships between Bacteroides 16S rRNA genetic markers and presence of bacterial enteric pathogens and conventional fecal indicators
Pages 3615-3628
Olga Savichtcheva, Noriko Okayama and Satoshi Okabe

Exposing water samples to ultraviolet light improves fluorometry for detecting human fecal contamination
Pages 3629-3642
Peter G. Hartel, Charles Hagedorn, Jennifer L. McDonald, Jared A. Fisher, Michael A. Saluta, Jerold W. Dickerson Jr., Lisa C. Gentit, Steven L. Smith, Nehru S. Mantripragada, Kerry J. Ritter, et al.

Genotype diversity of Escherichia coli isolates in natural waters determined by PFGE and ERIC-PCR
Pages 3643-3648
Elizabeth A. Casarez, Suresh D. Pillai and George D. Di Giovanni

Population structure of Cladophora-borne Escherichia coli in nearshore water of Lake Michigan
Pages 3649-3654
Muruleedhara N. Byappanahalli, Richard L. Whitman, Dawn A. Shively, John Ferguson, Satoshi Ishii and Michael J. Sadowsky

Comparisons of water quality parameters from diverse catchments during dry periods and following rain events
Pages 3655-3666
Vikaskumar G. Shah, R. Hugh Dunstan, Phillip M. Geary, Peter Coombes, Timothy K. Roberts and Tony Rothkirch

Bacterial source tracking from diverse land use catchments by sterol ratios
Pages 3667-3674
Vikaskumar G. Shah, R. Hugh Dunstan, Phillip M. Geary, Peter Coombes, Timothy K. Roberts and Tony Rothkirch

Detection and genotyping of Giardia duodenalis in wastewater: Relation between assemblages and faecal contamination origin
Pages 3675-3682
Isabelle Bertrand and Janine Schwartzbrod

The application of a recently isolated strain of Bacteroides (GB-124) to identify human sources of faecal pollution in a temperate river catchment
Pages 3683-3690
James Ebdon, Maite Muniesa and Huw Taylor

Evaluating potential applications of faecal sterols in distinguishing sources of faecal contamination from mixed faecal samples
Pages 3691-3700
Vikaskumar G. Shah, R. Hugh Dunstan, Phillip M. Geary, Peter Coombes, Timothy K. Roberts and Ellak Von Nagy-Felsobuki

16S rRNA-based assays for quantitative detection of universal, human-, cow-, and dog-specific fecal Bacteroidales: A Bayesian approach
Pages 3701-3715
Beverly J. Kildare, Christian M. Leutenegger, Belinda S. McSwain, Dustin G. Bambic, Veronica B. Rajal and Stefan Wuertz

Monitoring source water for microbial contamination: Evaluation of water quality measures
Pages 3716-3728
Jeanine D. Plummer and Sharon C. Long

Microbial source tracking in a rural watershed dominated by cattle
Pages 3729-3739
A.K. Graves, C. Hagedorn, A. Brooks, R.L. Hagedorn and E. Martin

Using DNA suspension arrays to identify library-independent markers for bacterial source tracking
Pages 3740-3746
Douglas R. Call, Dennis M. Satterwhite and Marilyn Soule

Confirmation of putative stormwater impact on water quality at a Florida beach by microbial source tracking methods and structure of indicator organism populations
Pages 3747-3757
M.J. Brownell, V.J. Harwood, R.C. Kurz, S.M. McQuaig, J. Lukasik and T.M. Scott

Detection and remediation of human-origin pollution at two public beaches in Virginia using multiple source tracking methods
Pages 3758-3770
J.W. Dickerson Jr., C. Hagedorn and A. Hassall

Sourcing faecal pollution: A combination of library-dependent and library-independent methods to identify human faecal pollution in non-sewered catchments
Pages 3771-3779
W. Ahmed, J. Stewart, T. Gardner, D. Powell, P. Brooks, D. Sullivan and N. Tindale

Validation of host-specific Bacteriodales 16S rRNA genes as markers to determine the origin of faecal pollution in Atlantic Rim countries of the European Union
Pages 3780-3784
Andrew H. Gawler, Jean E. Beecher, João Brandão, Nora M. Carroll, Leonor Falcão, Michèle Gourmelon, Bartholomew Masterson, Baltazar Nunes, Jonathan Porter, Alain Rincé, et al.

Detection of virulence genes in Escherichia coli of an existing metabolic fingerprint database to predict the sources of pathogenic E. coli in surface waters
Pages 3785-3791
W. Ahmed, J. Tucker, K.A. Bettelheim, R. Neller and M. Katouli



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