DNA water runoff tests questioned
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Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- City officials may learn the origin of bacteria flowing
into the harbor by conducting DNA tests, but the results could be of
limited use if they don’t spell out how much contamination comes from
each source, water quality experts said Tuesday.
“That’s what we need to know: the percentage of human waste versus the
percentage of animal waste,” said Ken Theisen, a Santa Ana Regional Water
Quality Control Board sanitary engineer. “Quantifying it is really what
we need.”
The tests are scheduled to begin in late June or early July.
Representatives from the county Health Care Agency, county Sanitation
District and other offices gathered Tuesday at City Hall in a meeting
intended to give officials a better picture of the DNA program, Deputy
City Manager Dave Kiff said.
Some who attended said they were concerned by what they heard.
Charles McGee, a laboratory supervisor for the sanitation district, said
he was skeptical that Mansour Samadpour of the University of Washington
in Seattle -- who will probably head up the study -- can provide a
breakdown of the contaminants to be found in Newport Beach water samples.
Others, including Southern California Coastal Water Research Project
statistician Molly Leecaster, said they worried about whether the
sampling of local waters was sufficiently broad to give an accurate
picture of which contaminants might be lurking offshore.
She said the samples will not be as useful if they are a small group from
a limited area.
The study -- a state-funded, $175,000 effort to pinpoint the specific
types of pollution that end up in Newport waters -- would use DNA testing
to match strains of E. coli bacteria from water samples against a
database of bacteria strains from sewage, animals and other sources.
In theory, the program would provide a picture of what kinds of
contamination are found in the water, allowing officials to use their
pollution-fighting dollars in the most effective way.
But the individual DNA tests don’t indicate how much of a given kind of
bacteria is in the water; they merely indicate that certain bacteria are
present. Drawing broad conclusions from this data, some officials worry,
could lead to an inaccurate picture of the contamination.
“It will still be a mystery after this [study] unless we can work out a
way to quantify [the relative levels of contaminants],” McGee said.
Kiff said he found the program criticisms to be fair but argued that the
study would still be useful.
“There’s really no better process out there” for identifying pollution
sources, he said. “If there was something better, we’d be doing it.”
For his part, Samadpour said criticisms about the study’s accuracy could
be addressed by tinkering with the way the water samples are taken.
“It’s all in the sampling plan,” he said.
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