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Published in J. Environ. Qual. 33:316-329 (2004).
© ASA, CSSA, SSSA
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TECHNICAL REPORTS

Vadose Zone Processes and Chemical Transport

Evaluating Microbial Purification during Soil Treatment of Wastewater with Multicomponent Tracer and Surrogate Tests

Sheila Van Cuyk*,a, Robert L. Siegrista, Kathryn Lowea and Ronald W. Harveyb

a Environmental Science and Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO 80401
b Water Resources Division, United States Geological Survey, Boulder, CO 80303

* Corresponding author (svancuyk{at}mines.edu).

Received for publication October 29, 2002. Soil treatment of wastewater has the potential to achieve high purification efficiency, yet the understanding and predictability of purification with respect to removal of viruses and other pathogens is limited. Research has been completed to quantify the removal of virus and bacteria through the use of microbial surrogates and conservative tracers during controlled experiments with three-dimensional pilot-scale soil treatment systems in the laboratory and during the testing of full-scale systems under field conditions. The surrogates and tracers employed included two viruses (MS-2 and PRD-1 bacteriophages), one bacterium (ice-nucleating active Pseudomonas), and one conservative tracer (bromide ion). Efforts have also been made to determine the relationship between viruses and fecal coliform bacteria in soil samples below the wastewater infiltrative surface, and the correlation between Escherichia coli concentrations measured in percolating soil solution as compared with those estimated from analyses of soil solids. The results suggest episodic breakthrough of virus and bacteria during soil treatment of wastewater and a 2 to 3 log (99–99.9%) removal of virus and near complete removal of fecal coliform bacteria during unsaturated flow through 60 to 90 cm of sandy medium. Results also suggest that the fate of fecal coliform bacteria may be indicative of that of viruses in soil media near the infiltrative surface receiving wastewater effluent. Concentrations of fecal coliform in percolating soil solution may be conservatively estimated from analysis of extracted soil solids.

Abbreviations: BT10, time to 10% breakthrough • BT50, time to 50% breakthrough • cfu, colony forming units • INA, ice-nucleating active • pfu, plaque forming unit • STE, septic tank effluent • TOC, total organic carbon







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The SCI Journals Agronomy Journal Crop Science
Vadose Zone Journal Journal of Plant Registrations
Journal of Natural Resources
and Life Sciences Education
Soil Science Society of America Journal
Copyright © 2004 by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America.