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<i>Escherichia coli</i> Loading at or Near Base Flow in a Mixed‐Use Watershed

Randall W. GentryCenter for Environmental Biotechnology The University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996John F. McCarthyCenter for Environmental Biotechnology The University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996Alice C. LaytonCenter for Environmental Biotechnology The University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996Larry D. McKayCenter for Environmental Biotechnology The University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996Dan WilliamsCenter for Environmental Biotechnology The University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996Shesh R. KoiralaCenter for Environmental Biotechnology The University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996Gary S. SaylerCenter for Environmental Biotechnology The University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996
2006en
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This study analyzed the occurrence of Escherichia coli in a mixed land-use watershed with human, cattle, and wildlife fecal inputs located in a karstic geologic region using synoptic monitoring (samples taken throughout the watershed system) during base-flow conditions. The objective of the study was to evaluate the occurrence of E. coli during base-flow conditions for several months at seven different main channel and nine different tributary sampling sites in the Stock Creek watershed, a 49.3-km(2) basin located in Knoxville, TN. Escherichia coli densities were measured using the Colilert (Defined Substrate Technology) method. The instantaneous loads for E. coli were determined from measured flow rates and E. coli densities, with the highest loading rates observed in the late fall. The study indicated a strong correlation between E. coli load rate (colony-forming units [CFU]/d), 7-d antecedent precipitation, and turbidity. Water quality data, however, also exhibited a spatial dependency; for example, the E. coli load rate was better correlated with turbidity in the slower draining basin tailwater sampling sites than in the faster draining upstream headwater sampling sites. In the headwater sites, the E. coli load rate was better correlated with 7-d antecedent precipitation than turbidity.

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