Skip to main content
ARS Home » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #283140

Title: Transport and fate of microorganisms in soils with preferential flow under different solution chemistry conditions

Author
item WANG, YUSONG - University Of California
item Bradford, Scott
item SIMUNEK, JIRI - University Of California

Submitted to: Water Resources Research
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 2/27/2013
Publication Date: 5/17/2013
Citation: Wang, Y., Bradford, S.A., Simunek, J. 2013. Transport and fate of microorganisms in soils with preferential flow under different solution chemistry conditions. Water Resources Research. doi:10.1002/wrcr.20174.

Interpretive Summary: Microorganisms, including pathogens, can be rapidly transported to groundwater through preferential flow pathways in the root zone. The objective of this study was to investigate the influence of solution chemistry on the preferential transport and release of a representative bacteria and virus. Results indicate that the contribution of preferential flow was greater for the bacteria than the virus and that this effect increased as the ionic strength increased. The findings from this study will be of interest to scientists and engineers concerned with predicting the rapid transport of microbes through the root zone.

Technical Abstract: [1] Laboratory and numerical studies were conducted to investigate the transport and fate of Escherichia coli D21g and coliphage f174 in saturated soils with preferential flow under different solution ionic strength (IS'='1, 5, 20, and 100 mM) conditions. Preferential flow systems were created by embedding a coarse-sand lens (710 µm) into a finer matrix sand (120 µm). Complementary transport experiments were conducted in homogeneous sand columns to identify controlling transport and retention processes, and to independently determine model parameters for numerical simulations in the heterogeneous experiments. Results from homogeneous and heterogeneous transport experiments demonstrate that retention of E. coli D21g and fX174 increased with IS, while the effect on E. coli D21g in finer sand was much greater than in coarse sand. This microbe transport behavior was well described by numerical simulations. The importance of preferential flow on microbe transport was found to be enhanced at higher IS, even though the overall transport decreased. However, the contribution of preferential flow was much higher for E. coli D21g than fX174. Deposition profiles revealed significant cell retention at the interface of the coarse-sand lens and the fine-sand matrix as a result of mass transfer. Cell release from the preferential flow system with a reduction of solution IS exhibited multipulse breakthrough behavior that was strongly dependent on the initial amount of cell retention, especially at the lens-matrix interface.