Document Details

Microbial Water Quality at Minimally Human-Impacted Reference Beaches in Northern California

Thomas Jabusch, Philip Trowbridge | September 3rd, 2018


All of the coastal reference beaches that have been used by the State of California for quantifying “natural loads” of fecal indicator bacteria have been in Southern California. None has been in the northern and central coastal regions of the State. To fill this information gap, this study assessed bacteria concentrations at coastal reference beaches in Northern California, investigated possible factors influencing the bacteria concentrations, and evaluated how these concentrations compare to results from the Southern California reference beaches.

Reference beaches were defined as open beaches with breaking waves that receive runoff from undeveloped watersheds. The study beaches were selected to represent a variety of geographical conditions and watershed sizes in Northern California. Five reference beaches were sampled between January 2016 and September 2017 for a total of 25‐30 sampling events, including 10 wet weather events, 10 winter dry events, and 10 summer dry events. The number of samples collected was admittedly small for characterizing variable bacteria concentrations but was deemed sufficient for providing initial information relevant to management questions.

At each beach, samples were collected from an ocean site in the surf zone and from a freshwater site in the watershed draining to the beach. Samples were analyzed for total coliform, fecal coliform, Escherichia coli (E. coli), enterococci (ocean sites only), as well as a human‐specific genetic marker (human Bacteroides HF183).

Keywords

monitoring, stormwater, water quality