Chicago River microbe population analyzed in new partnership

Dec. 2, 2013
Dept. of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory and MWRD partnership to conduct research on microbial content in Chicago-area waterways.


Dec. 2, 2013 -- A new partnership between the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory and the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago (MWRD) will soon be established to conduct research on microbial content in Chicago-area waterways.

The agencies plan to measure and record changes in microbial communities as the MWRD starts to disinfect its secondary treated water at the O'Brien and Calumet Water Reclamation Plants and as parts of the Tunnel and Reservoir Plan -- the Thornton reservoir and the first phase of the McCook reservoir -- are completed.

For the MWRD-sponsored project, Argonne scientists will analyze samples taken monthly from the Chicago River during the recreational season, between March and November, and run them through a DNA sequencer to identify and count the microbes in the river.

"Repeating the sampling is critical because the river's inhabitants change frequently," said Argonne environmental scientist Cristina Negri. "The microbial load changes with the season, after rainfall, during temperature swings, after large discharges, or after sewer overflows. Even boats churn up the sediments as they pass and redistribute the microbes."

The entire study will take seven years and will record the changes that happen as the MWRD takes steps to manage its outflow. The samples taken this year and next will serve as a baseline, and more will be collected again each year until 2019.

"This work will provide a more genomic science-based understanding of the microbial health of the Chicago-area waterways and should help us understand the sources of microbes that we currently recognize during fecal indicator bacteria monitoring," said Geeta K. Rijal, MWRD supervising environmental microbiologist.

Negri and her colleagues will create a hydrological model of the river that incorporates the microbial data, laying out how water flows from different sources and how rain events affect bacterial diversity and count.

"The river has become substantially cleaner over the past several decades, thanks to many interventions, but we still don't have a very thorough understanding of what lives there," said Dr. Jack Gilbert, an Argonne environmental microbiologist. "The EPA does require analyzing the water, but they currently just look for E. coli or a few other known pathogens. We look at all bacteria and viruses, pathogenic or not, by sequencing the genomes of the whole community and using our computational might to sort through who is there and what they are doing."

The team will also study how microbes flourish in specific areas and determine if, say, increasing the amount of concrete near an outflow affects bacteria, or if water quality changes as the river goes past farms or factories.

"We studied the Tongue River in Montana and found that we could detect even a tiny community of humans, just 100 people, by how the bacteria changed downstream," Gilbert said.

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