Title: Methods
1Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004Nutrients,
Bacteria and Caffeine
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
Next Steps
Jean-Francois Bouffard, B.I.T. Aquality
Environmental Consulting Ltd. April 16, 2005
2Introduction
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Stream Study
- LEPA
- AAFRD (Sarah Depoe)
- AAFC-PFRA (Jason Vanrobaeys)
- Caffeine
- LEPA and Aquality
- Bacteria
- LEPA, ARHA, and Aquality
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
Next Steps
3Methods
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Stream survey
- 8 sites sampled during April 2004
- During spring thaw (April 1st, 5th, 7th, 12th,
and 20th) - Parameters
- Nutrients, bacteria, ions, metals and pesticides
(1 Site) - Flow gauging
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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4Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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5Methods
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Caffeine
- May 21 (composite sampling)
- 11 sites LLN 3 bottles apiece
- 2 streams
- 2 beaches - Nakamun
- Sept 7 Follow up on May sampling in lake only
- Bacteria
- In lake samples taken with ARHA during May 11th
sampling
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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6Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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7Results
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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8Results
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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9Results
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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10Results
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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11Results
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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12Discussion
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Nutrients were highest in early April
- TP and TN exceeded ASWQ guidelines for the
Protection of Aquatic Life in 100 of the samples - NO2-N 40 compliant
- E.Coli 91 compliant
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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13Discussion
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
14AAWQI Index
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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15Discussion
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Typical of other Alberta Streams
- CAESA/AESA study 1996-2003
- Lac la Nonne watershed considered to have
moderate Ag intensity - (Anderson, A-M, S.E.Cooke and N. MacAlpine.
1999) - Other watersheds of similar Ag intensity produce
similar results
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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16Discussion
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Bacteria showed decreasing trend
- High counts at Site 1 and 3 indicate recent fecal
contamination - Trace exact source using Microbial Source
Tracking techniques
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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17Discussion
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Only 1 pesticide (2-4, D) was detected
- Extremely low levels
- Toxic to fish at much higher levels, minimal
effect on humans - Change timing of sample collection
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
Next Steps
18Discussion
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- The detection of caffeine in Lac la Nonne
confirms that human sewage is entering the lake - Possible sources include
- Older/leaky septic systems
- Illegal dumping/release of septage
- Improperly placed outhouses
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
Next Steps
19The Next Step
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Minimize runoff
- Preserving riparian areas
- Restore wetlands
- Accurate nutrient budget
- Debate over sources of nutrients
- 57 from cleared lands (Mitchell and Prepas,
1991) - Uncertain other sources
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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20The Next Step
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Investigation into sources of human sewage
- Septic tank inspections
- Continue monitoring as a deterrent
- Probably the easiest source of nutrients to
control
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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21The Next Step
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Complete and thorough State of the Watershed
Report - Moose Lake, Lac la Biche, etc.
- Watershed Management Plan under Alberta Water Act
- Continue education and outreach
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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22Acknowledgements
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- LEPA and the volunteers who made all the sampling
happen - Jason Vanrobaeys PFRA
- Sarah Depoe AAFRD
- Jay White - Aquality
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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23Thanks!
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Discussion The
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24Prediction
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Avg daily urine prod 1.4L
- Avg urine caffeine conc 1500 µg/L
- Adult urine caffeine production 2100 µg
- Avg urination freq 5x daily
- Volume of flush 9.8 L 49 L/Day
Introduction Methods Results Conclusion The
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25Prediction
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Adult caffeine produced per day
- Total amount of water
-
- 2100 µg caffeine
- 50.4 L
-
- 42 µg/L (Predicted)
Introduction Methods Results Conclusion The
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26Prediction
Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
- Detection level 0.02 µg/L
- Predicted conc. 42 µg/L
- Possible to detect caffeine diluted up to 2100
times!
Introduction Methods Results Conclusion The
Next Steps
27Fecal Contamination Issues
- Human and animal feces contain high levels of
nutrients - Nutrients limited in aquatic systems
- Phosphorus
- Nitrogen
- Contains several pathogens which can be fatal to
humans and others (contact or ingestion)
28Effect of Excess Phosphorus
- Primary Impacts
- Excessive macrophyte growth
- Algal blooms
- Negative impact on livestock
29- Fecal contamination is a public health risk
- Drinking water contamination, contact recreation,
harvest of irrigated foods - Water contaminated with human feces are
generally regarded as a greater risk to human
health, as they are more likely to contain
human-specific enteric pathogens - T. Scott et al. 2002
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31Sources of Fecal Contamination
- Residential sources
- Lakeside cottages/subdivisions
- Leaky septic systems
- Rogue dumping
- Improper outhouse placement
- Urban effluent
32Sources of Fecal Contamination
- Agricultural sources
- Feedlots
- In-situ watering by cattle
- Manure application practices (timing, amount)
33Sources of Fecal Contamination
- Wildlife sources
- Bear, elk, deer, birds, etc.
34What is BST?
- Using DNA fingerprinting to identify sources of
microbial contamination in surface water. - Term coined in 2002 by Hagedorn and Wiggins
35What is BST?
- Methods fall into 3 categories molecular,
biochemical and chemical - No standard method developed
- Emerging area of research and technology
development, particularly for drinking water
36How does it work?
- Fecal bacteria are uniquely adapted to the host
animal in which they live - Using DNA analysis techniques we can identify
these markers in fecal bacteria
37How it is Done
- Samples collected around the watershed
- Fecal bacteria are cultured and analyzed in lab
- Compared to pre-existing database
38Identifying Sources of Contamination
- Pinpoint by taking samples at suspected sources
- Analyzed
- New genetic markers added to project database
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40Dealing with Suspected Sources of Contamination
- Collect samples from location downstream of
suspected contamination source - Results compared to samples in database
41Advantages
- This technique has a much greater power of
resolution compared to previous methods - No longer tracking an analog of fecal
contamination - Allows us to create mitigation plans based on
better knowledge
42Canadian Examples
- Research at the University of Victoria (Maeys and
Mazumder, 2004) - Elbow River study ruminants and humans (Sosiak
and Dixon, 2004) - Aquality to provide as a commercial service
(Spring, 2005)
43Further Study
- More comparative studies to determine best method
for watershed studies - Field protocol timing, number of samples
collected, number of isolates identified,
location and number of sites - Need to optimize analytical and statistical
methods to minimize sources of error
44Lac la Nonne Water Quality Report 2004
Introduction Methods Results Conclusion The
Next Steps