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The effect of sodium thiosulfate dechlorination on fecal indicator bacteria enumeration: laboratory and field data
Author(s) -
Anna Murray,
Emily Kumpel,
Rachel Peletz,
Ranjiv Khush,
Daniele Lantagne
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of water and health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.482
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1996-7829
pISSN - 1477-8920
DOI - 10.2166/wh.2017.077
Subject(s) - sodium thiosulfate , thiosulfate , chlorine , water quality , chemistry , indicator bacteria , environmental chemistry , most probable number , bacteria , filtration (mathematics) , sodium , fecal coliform , water treatment , environmental science , environmental engineering , biology , inorganic chemistry , ecology , mathematics , sulfur , organic chemistry , genetics , statistics
In microbiological water quality testing, sample dechlorination with sodium thiosulfate is recommended to ensure that results accurately reflect the water quality at sample collection. Nevertheless, monitoring institutions in low-resource settings do not always dechlorinate samples, and there is limited research describing how this practice impacts drinking water quality results. The effect of dechlorination on indicator bacteria counts was evaluated by spiking laboratory water with five Escherichia coli (E. coli) concentrations (10 4 -10 8 CFU/100 mL), chlorinating at six doses (0-0.6 mg/L), holding samples with and without sodium thiosulfate for 5-7 hours, and enumerating E. coli by membrane filtration with m-lauryl sulfate media. Additionally, sub-Saharan African water suppliers enumerated thermotolerant coliform by membrane filtration in paired chlorinated water samples collected with and without sodium thiosulfate. Across all E. coli and chlorine doses in the laboratory, and all field tests, samples held without sodium thiosulfate had lower bacteria counts (p < 0.001). Additionally, chlorinated water supply samples held without sodium thiosulfate had an 87.5% false negative rate. Results indicate the importance of dechlorinating microbiological water quality samples, discarding data from chlorinated samples collected without dechlorination, and reinforcing dechlorination recommendations in resource-limited environments to improve water safety management.

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