Abstract
An overlooked source of faecal contamination of rivers comes from
misconnected pipes from residential properties. With a large increase in
housing developments along with property extensions, there is widespread
concern that piping networks are not being adequately checked for
misconnections before property sales. Two surveys of 45 sites on the
River Lee and its tributaries used coliforms and biofilm communities to
identify misconnection hotspots, with the focus on contamination from
raw sewage. Between the 2013 survey and a repeat in 2020, there has been
a significant increase in the number of coliforms from surface water
outfalls from an average of 43,693 cfu per 100ml to 123,797 cfu - nearly
a three-fold increase. The percentage of misconnections containing raw
sewage was calculated as 7.2% in 2014, increasing to 10.6% in 2020,
thus suggesting an increase in the number of misconnections. The biofilm
communities that developed on tiles pegged into the river substrate
below surface water outfalls were categorised by three community
groupings: clean communities, a transitional group and dirty
communities. A clear separation between these groups can be seen in the
DECORANA plots. CCA found a relationship between taxa in clean and dirty
sites associated with coliform counts. This study highlights that the
contribution of raw sewage is underestimated, and this is becoming a
persistent and serious pollution problem, especially in urban rivers
where the increase is greater. Using coliform testing and biofilm
communities in combination will highlight misconnection hotspots.