Assessment of bacterial diversity in western Accra, Ghana, drinking water samples
Date
2019
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development
Abstract
The design and performance characteristics of municipal drinking water systems can profoundly
influence public health. To assess the operational attributes of an Accra, Ghana drinking water
distribution system, high-throughput 454 pyrosequencing was employed to characterize its bacterial
community composition. Samples from the waterworks and four household sources (one household
tap and three polytank storage units) were analyzed within one of Accra’s distribution networks
over 4 months. Samples provided between 9,059 and 20,076 reads (average ¼ 13,056) that
represented a broad range of bacterial diversity, including rare genera. Minimum Entropy
Decomposition (MED) analysis showed that the sequences described four major assemblages.
Assemblages 1 and 2 dominated the waterworks and household tap samples while polytank storage
unit samples, with one exception, contained assemblages 3 or 4. The considerable bacterial
taxonomic difference between different sources suggests that contamination and/or selective
growth shapes bacterial community structures after treatment at the waterworks. Of particular
interest are the major differences between the poly tank samples following storage and the
tap/waterworks samples, suggesting that water storage (stagnation) can select for unique microbial
populations
Description
Research Article
Keywords
454 pyrotag sequencing, bacterial diversity, drinking water, polytanks, water storage