Stirling Observer

Uni study finds sewage waste risk on plastics

- KAIYA MARJORIBAN­KS

Harmful bacteria on sewageasso­ciated plastic waste washed up on beaches can survive long enough to pose a risk to human health, new research by Stirling University experts has found.

The uni’s team found “concentrat­ed reservoirs”of faecal bacteria still present on waste such as wet wipes and cotton bud sticks on beaches in Scotland.

Led by Professor Richard Quilliam, the team found that bacteria such as E coli and intestinal enterococc­i (IE) were binding to these plastics more often than to naturally occurring materials such as seaweed and sand, thereby prolonging their persistenc­e in the water and at the beach.

“We all know that sewage waste on our beaches is unsightly, but it could also be a risk to public health,”said Professor Quilliam.

“There has been much coverage recently of sewage waste being directly discharged into rivers and the sea, especially after heavy rain when some sewage treatment plants exceed their capacity for effective treatment.

“Some of the plastic waste we have recovered could be from legacy sewage spills that have persisted in the environmen­t, but the volume of waste we are seeing is shocking.”

His team collected plastic waste from ten beaches along the Firth of Forth estuary in Scotland, including bathing water beaches such as Aberdour Silver Sands and Portobello.

“We expected to collect a few wet wipes everywhere, but the team came back with bags of them,”he said.

PHD researcher Rebecca Metcalf, also from the University of Stirling, is lead author of a new paper reporting the study. She said:“finding faecal bacteria could also indicate the possibilit­y of other human pathogens such as norovirus, rotavirus, or salmonella.

“The extent to which people could be exposed to these pathogens is beyond the scope of our study, but obviously there’s always a risk of children picking up and playing with wet wipes or other plastic waste on the beach.”

The team also found evidence that species of vibrio – a naturally occurring bacteria, some strains of which can cause a severe upset stomach – were able to colonise wet wipes.

And they found high rates of antimicrob­ial resistance – resistance to antibiotic­s – present in the bacteria on the wipes and cotton bud sticks.

The research is part of the £1.85 million‘plastic Vectors’ project – funded by the Natural Environmen­t Research Council (NERC) – which is investigat­ing how plastics in the environmen­t can help transport bacteria and viruses, and the impact that may have on human health.

The paper‘sewage-associated plastic waste washed up on beaches can act as a reservoir for faecal bacteria, potential human pathogens, and genes for antimicrob­ial resistance’is published in the journal Marine Biology Bulletin.

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