Klebsielleae in drinking water emanating from redwood tanks

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Abstract

A survey was made of the bacteriological quality and chlorine content of 33 public and private water systems that utilize redwood storage tanks. Coliforms of the genera Klebsiella and Enterobacter were isolated from 9 of 10 private drinking water systems and from 11 of 23 water systems in state and federal parks. Total coliform counts in the private systems exceeded federal membrane filter guidelines by as much as 10- to 40-fold. Coliform counts were highest in the newer reservoirs. Factors contributing to poor water quality are: lack of automated chlorination equipment or an insufficient supply to maintain a residual, common inlet/outlet plumbing design, and lengthy average retention periods. The latter two factors contribute to improper mixing and stagnation of the water, whereas the former allows microbes to multiply on the water-soluble nutrients that leach from the wood. Wooden reservoirs exert a high chlorine demand, and 0.4 ppm of chlorine residual in the incoming tank water proves inadequate. It is suggested that specific water-soluble nutrients in redwood (and in numerous other types of botanical material) induce a natural nutritional selection for coliforms of the tribe Klebsielleae.

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Seidler, R. J., Morrow, J. E., & Bagley, S. T. (1977). Klebsielleae in drinking water emanating from redwood tanks. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 33(4), 893–900. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.33.4.893-900.1977

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