Distribution and ecology of campylobacters in coastal plain streams (Georgia, United States of America) |
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Authors: | Vereen Ethell Lowrance R Richard Cole Dana J Lipp Erin K |
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Affiliation: | University of Georgia, Department of Environmental Health Science, 206 Environmental Health Science Bldg., Athens, GA 30602, USA. |
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Abstract: | ![]() Campylobacter is the leading cause of bacterium-associated diarrhea in the United States and most developed countries. While this disease is considered a food-borne disease, many clinical cases cannot be linked to a food source. In rural and agrarian areas environmental transmission may be an important factor contributing to case loads. Here we investigated the waterborne prevalence of campylobacters in a mixed-use rural watershed in the coastal plain of southern Georgia (United States). Six sites representing various degrees of agricultural and human influence were surveyed biweekly to monthly for 1 year for the presence of culturable thermophilic campylobacters and other measures of water quality. Campylobacters were frequently present in agriculture- and sewage-impacted stretches of streams. The mean campylobacter counts and overall prevalence were highest downstream from a wastewater treatment plant that handled both human and poultry slaughterhouse waste (
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