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THE USE OF CHEMICAL AND MICROBIAL TRACERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES In hydrology a tracer is defined as matter or energy carried by water which will give information concerning the direction and/or velocity of the water as well as potential contaminants which could be transported by the water. The first reported ground water tracing experiment was almost 2000 years ago when Philip, the tetrarch of Trachonitis, threw chaff into a crater lake and reported that the chaff appeared downgradient in one of the springs at the headwaters of the Jordan River. 2000 years have seen many changes occur in the environment and in scientific methods and procedures. The microbial contamination of ground water is a serious problem that has resulted in large outbreaks of waterborne disease. There are many sources of human pathogenic micro-organisms which can cause ground-water contamination including leaky sewer lines, sanitary landfills, waste water, etc.. The movement of bacteria and viruses into ground water is influenced by many environmental factors which are difficult to define completely. Thus, the ability to trace microbial movement in ground water is essential in recognising the potential for transmission of diseasecausing micro-organisms. it is desirable to use tracer techniques to • monitor the movement of microorganisms with percolating water through the soil systems and ground water when assessing new sites for land application of waste water, • septic tank drainfields, • investigation of sources of waterborne disease outbreaks. An ideal ground water tracer is • nontoxic, • inexpensive, • moves with the water, • is easy to detect in trace amounts, • does not alter the natural direction of the flow of the water, • is chemically stable for a desired length of time, • is not present in large amounts in the water being studied, • is neither filtered nor sorbed by the solid medium through which the water moves. Almost certainly, the ideal ground water tracer does not exist. Most ground water-water tracers used for hydrological and geological studies are chemicals, • most often fluorescein dyes or • halogen salts. They are used to determine • directions and • velocities of surface flow. The criteria for selecting a suitable tracer organism for groundwater contamination is the duration of survival as well as their retention in soil-water systems. Microbial tracers have the advantage of • not being mutagenic • not having potential toxic effects, and • having a finite lifetime. TYPES OF MICROBIAL TRACERS Bacteria are the most commonly used microbial tracers because of their ease of growth and detection. Coliform bacteria and in particular Escherichia coli are extensively used for monitoring ground-water quality. Coliform bacteria are excreted in large numbers in the faecal wastes of man and other warm-blooded animals and thus can be used to monitor the movement of septic and sewage wastes in ground water. As the faecal coliform bacteria are not natural inhabitants of soil and ground water, they can be differentiated easily from common soil microflora by their ability to grow on selective media at elevated temperatures. faecal coliforms were traced at a land disposal site in New Zealand over a distance of 900m. The bacterial moved at a rate of approximately 150 m/day. Based on this rate of movement and the measured survival time for the bacteria, faecal coliforms were estimated to be traceable for at lease 2.5km from their source. The disadvantage of using faecal organisms as tracers is the difficulty in differentiating between those which derived from the suspected source and those from other sources. Therefore, faecal bacteria with specific characteristics i.e. a marker which allows the tracer organisms to be distinguished from all background organisms in the system should be used. e.g. antibiotic-resistant strains of E. coli and Enterococcus faecalis are distinguished from naturally-occurring organisms by their ability to grow on media containing antibiotics which suppress the growth of the naturally-occurring organisms. Bacillus stearothermophilus and H2S-producing strains of E. coli. Can be used under limited conditions. As both E. coli (H2S+) and Bacillus stearothermophilus can be present in raw and treated effluent, they are unsuitable as tracers in sewage polluted waters. Tracer experiments have also been conducted by injecting a mixture of antibiotic resistant E.coli strains into a well site and monitoring their movements in down stream wells. The rate of movement during this experiment was found to be 350 meters per day. Other species of bacteria indicated to have potential as tracer organisms include, Bacillus chromobacterium, Enterococcus, Serratia marcescens, Chromobacterium violaceum and Bacillus globigii as tracers through ground. Caution. These organisms may naturally be present in the soil. Enterococcus zymogenes was demonstrated successfully as a ground water tracer in terms of its long term survival and capability to move on ground water. Bacteria have the following advantages as ground water tracers. They are: • easy to grow in large numbers and to assay. • through the use of various markers they are usually distinguishable from other flora likely to be present in the ground water and the soil. Caution in their use. they could be potential pathogens; E. coli has enterotoxigenic strains which can cause disease in man. (E. coli O157:H7) • Some m’orgs are capable of growth in the environment, may produce erroneous results; • many are large enough to be filtered out on certain soils; • can adsorb to a variety of surfaces removing them from circulation; • their movement probably does not reflect the movement of viruses. • even with markers, like antibiotic resistance, it is often difficult to distinguish test organisms from those naturally present because markers can be lost during interaction with natural populations. It also would seem to be imprudent to inject antibiotic resistant micro organisms into ground water because of the possible transfer of resistance to potential human pathogens especially when the water might be consumed later. The odds of this can be reduced greatly by the use of bacteria which do not carry the genetic information for antibiotic sensitivity on plasmids. Thus prudence should be used in the selection of bacterial species to be used as tracers, and should be used only when experimental conditions dictate or where the movement of ground water is traced back to a source of pollution where organisms are already present. baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) has been used to trace movement of microorganisms in artificially recharged ground water. 351bs of yeast cells were injected into wells, yeast cells were found to penetrate more than 7 meters into a sand and gravel aquifer in less than 48 hours. In evaluating the use of yeasts it should be noted that the distance over which the yeasts cells were followed in these experiments was short and their survival is dependent on nutrients present in the environment. The spores of the club moss, Lycopodium clavatum had been used primarily by speleologists as tracers to determine subterranean drainage characteristics in limestone regions. The spores are small cellulose bodies 30 µm in diameter. The technique involves colouring, Lycopodium spores with biological strains, injecting the dye spores into the flow system at sinkholes and trapping the spores with plankton nets at potential resurgencies. Spores are then examined under a microscope. advantages of using these spores in karst regions. • Their size and density reportedly allowed them to move readily with ground water. • They are resistant to detrimental factors in the environment and appear to be '1harmless" non pathogens. • In addition, they can be stained with five different colours of biological stains permitting their used as multiple tracers. Animal viruses, such as, hepatitis and the Norwalk agent are known to be transmitted by contaminated ground water. Other animal viruses pathogenic to man have been isolated from ground water. Because all human enteric viruses are capable of causing disease they cannot be used safely as tracers. To overcome this problem, vaccine strains of poliovirus type 1 has been used as a tracer but the vaccine strain of poliovirus can be responsible for serious disease in man, although the odds are extremely low. Thus, caution must be observed carefully even if the vaccine strain is used. Most animal enteric viruses are not known to infect man. Thus, bovine enterovirus type 1 has been used to trace the movement of viruses from septic tank. Bacteriophages i.e. a λ-like bacteriophage of E. coli K 12 was used and found to be an excellent tracer of water movement, especially in polluted rivers. The advantages of using bacteriophages as water tracers are:- • The phage is non-pathogenic to man and domestic animals; • It is specific for its host bacteria; • Assays, simple and rapid; • It has good survival characteristics. type 2 phage of Aerobacter aerogenenes 243 has been used to follow the movement of shallow ground water in South Wales over a distance of up to 680 meter. Coliphage f2 has been used as a tracer virus to examine its accumulation and movement in the soil and ground water beneath the rapid infiltration land application site. Both pathogenic animal viruses indigenous to sewage and tracer f2 were detected in the ground water at a horizontal distance of 183 meter from the application site, indicating the potential use of f2 phage for tracing movement of pathogenic animal viruses. bacteriophages fit the criteria as ideal indicators most closely. In addition, because of host specificity, phages can be mixed, injected together, then distinguished on different hosts thereby permitting simultaneous multiple tracers. One drawback is that bacteriophages might be removed by adsorption to the soil. Methodology is available for the concentration of phages from large volumes of water. With the use of these techniques it is possible to detect as little as one to two phages in a 20L volume of water. Phage assay requires 12 to 24 hours which may be a drawback in some applications, but for most studies would pose no difficulties when samples are collected over long periods of time; furthermore, samples can be frozen for long term storage and assayed later. Phages are also available which have no known host common in the subsurfaces environment which can support their replication. For the most part, however, human and animal viruses are not suitable for tracer work because of potential public problems. CHEMICAL PHYSICAL TRACERS Because water has a high specific heat capacity compared with most natural materials, water does not change temperature rapidly as it migrates in the sub-surface. For e.g. Temperature anomalies associated with the spreading of warm waste water in the Hanford Reservation in the U.S, for example, were detected more than 5 miles from areas where the water entered the sub-surface. Changes of water temperature alter density and viscosity of the water, which will alter the velocity and direction of flow of the water. e.g. injected ground water at 40°C will travel more than twice as fast in the same aquifer under the same hydraulic gradient as will water at 5°C. Chemicals i.e. common salt will almost entirely ionise when dissolved in water. ionisation increases the electrical conductivity of the water containing the tracer. Method has been used for 100 years. However, high concentration of salt solutions must be introduced as tracers in order to produce significant changes in the electrical conductivity of the water at sampling points some distance away. As concentrated solutions will be denser than the native ground water they will tend to sink to the bottom of the aquifer and not follow the natural flow paths of the water. As a consequence, tracers are usually diluted so much in order to reduce their density effects that specific analytical detection of selected ions must be utilised rather than electrical conductivity. The number of ion types which might be used is very large. because of the low cost, ease of detection and low sorption, chloride and bromide are most popular. Because of sorption by cation exchange and the relatively high natural abundances of most ions, Br- is one of the best possibilities as a general tracer for ground water studies. nitrate ion can be used to monitor the percolation of the ionic constituents of septic tank effluent in a range of soil types and hydrogeological conditions. Iodide has been successfully used as a tracer for surface water and less so as a subsurface tracer. Iodide tends to be sorbed to a greater extent than either bromide or chloride. Natural concentrations of iodide, however, are very low, generally less than 0.01 mg/I, and methods for sensitive analysis of iodide are relatively simple. Chelating agents with heavy metals can be used to produce complexes which commonly have a zero charge. These complexes have low sorption on natural materials. For e.g. EDTA. heavy metals which have been used as tracers are • copper, • zinc, • cobalt and • lead. Higher costs of chemicals and detection methods, together with problems of toxicity have discouraged the widespread use of heavy metals as tracers. However, neutron activation analysis, while relatively expensive can provide a very sensitive method for detection of many metals thus allowing the use of tracers at extremely low dilutions. Groundwater tracing using organic anions, i.e benzoate, Sensitivity of detection and precision of measurement are very good using liquid chromatography, and, like other anions, they are highly mobile in natural aquifer systems. Several naturally occurring stable isotopes of the common elements have been used as ground water tracers. i.e H,C,N,O,S Requires • special analytical equipment, • tedious analysis, • high total costs have discouraged the use of most stable isotopes for artificially injected tracers. Stable isotopes, however, have been very useful for many special hydrologic studies. "Heavy water" (deuterium) containing relatively large concentrations of 2H has been used successfully as an injected tracer. increased awareness of radiation hazards has mitigated against the use of radio active tracers, may be used under certain conditions for the tracing of nonpotable water which is isolated from surface. One of the most commonly used radioactive tracer is 3H because it forms part of the water molecule and travels with the ground water. If it were not hazardous and if it were easier to detect very small quantities it would be an ideal tracer. Various organic dyes of low to negligible toxicity have long been used as ground water tracers. Because most of them are easily sorbed on solid materials, these tracers are best adapted to tests involving short travel distance, or within very permeable aquifers such as recent basalt, gravel and cavernous carbonate rocks. Advantages: • low general toxicity, • easy detection, • high sensitivity and • relatively low cost. The most useful of the dyes can be detected • visually in concentrations of a few parts per million, • by fluorometers in parts per billion, and • by sorption in activated charcoal and subsequent desorption < 0.1 part per billion. trace amounts of natural organic compounds may interfere with the detection of such low concentrations. Most tracer tests with dyes can be affected by • decomposition by strong light, • changes of pH and temperature • and sorption on solid surfaces. Tracer Dyes for e.g fluorescein, rhodamine WT (orange) lissamine FF (green) and amino G acid (blue) are among the most useful for water tracing. Blue fluorescent dyes, which are used in the textiles and paper industry to enhance the white appearance of these products are called optical brighteners. These dyes can be used as artificially injected tracers. e.g. lucophor PVS. Numerous gases have been used as sub-surface tracers but the tracing has most commonly been of the movement of air in the non-saturated zone. Chemically inert, but radioactive 133 Xe and 85 Kr appear to be quite suitable. Ethylmercaptan, a gas with a strong odour has been used in karst areas to establish the degree of inter-connection among various cavernous openings. One of the least expensive and most effective sources of olefactory tracers gases which has been reported are expired skunks. Because of their non reactive and non toxic nature noble gasses are attractive tracers. Radon which is present in the subsurface, but owing to its short half life (3.82 days) and the absence of parent uranium in the atmosphere, is virtually absent in surface water which has reached equilibrium with the atmosphere. Surveys of radon in surface streams and lakes have, therefore, been useful in detecting places where diffuse groundwater enters surface waters. Fluorocarbons compounds as chemical tracers. They are extremely non reactive and • do not break down chemically under normal ground water conditions. • They are easily detectable in water and in very low concentrations with an optimum working range of between 1 and 100 ppt. The limitation of fluorocarbons, however, is that • they are organic compounds and as such they • become dissolved in or • strongly sorbed by many other organic materials, therefore, they are unsuitable for tracing water in subsurface coal, peat, oil, shale and other organic rich rocks. comparative studies with the use of chemical and microbial tracers. i.e. antibiotic-resistant E. coli and fluorescein dye as tracers of ground water flow in a soil series in Oregon. The bacteria were recovered at the 45cm depth, 15m downslope one hour after addition. large numbers of E. coli survived during the 12 hour sampling period. Consideration should be given to more frequent use of marked strains of bacteria as tracers since these organisms more closely represent subsurface movement of microorganisms in soil and groundwater. A combination of chemical and biological tracer materials must be used to gain an accurate representation of the movement specific pollutant types in the effluent. e.g. Bacillus globigii spores and a bromide ion tracer would give an accurate indication of the risk of ground water pollution from septic tank effluents in a range of soil/overburden types and hydrogeological situations. Bacillus globigii now known as B. atrophaeus.