New
Bedford Harbor water quality study uses DNA fingerprinting analysis
and shows animal sources of fecal coliform many times that of humans
For
years, people have been concerned about pollution in New Bedford (Massachusetts)
Harbor, with a "red flag" raised over what human beings and
water treatment plants might be dumping into the bay.
A recently completed study
of water quality in New Bedford Harbor, commissioned by the New Bedford
Harbor Trustee Council and conducted by Applied Science Associates (ASA),
took a new approach to evaluate sources contributing pollution to the
harbor. The study combined a field sampling program and computer modeling
with DNA fingerprinting analysis to identify and quantify sources contributing
fecal coliform to the waters of Outer New Bedford Harbor.
The results of the computer
modeling, combined with the DNA analysis, indicate that humans are not
the most significant source of FC in the study area.
The study concluded that
humans accounted for only a small fraction (aboout 7 to 15%) of the
analyzed samples of fecal coliform entering the harbor. DNA analysis
reveals birds to be the dominant source of fecal coliform in the harbor,
with rodents and raccoons also significant contributors.
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