Scientists find bacteria, chemical compounds from coastal water pollution in sea spray aerosol
New research led by Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego has confirmed that coastal water pollution transfers to the atmosphere in sea spray aerosol, which can reach people beyond just beachgoers, surfers, and swimmers.
Rainfall in the US-Mexico border region causes complications for wastewater treatment and results in untreated sewage being diverted into the Tijuana River and flowing into the ocean in south Imperial Beach. This input of contaminated water has caused chronic coastal water pollution in Imperial Beach for decades.
New research shows that sewage-polluted coastal waters
transfer to the atmosphere in sea spray aerosol formed by breaking waves and
bursting bubbles. Sea spray aerosol contains bacteria, viruses, and chemical compounds
from the seawater.
The researchers report their findings March 2 in the journal Environmental Science & Technology. The study appears in the midst of a winter in which an estimated 13 billion gallons of sewage-polluted waters have entered the ocean via the Tijuana River since Dec. 28, 2022, according to lead researcher Kim Prather, a Distinguished Chair in Atmospheric Chemistry, and Distinguished Professor at Scripps Oceanography and UC San Diego’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. She also serves as the founding director of the NSF Center for Aerosol Impacts on Chemistry of the Environment (CAICE).
“We’ve shown that up to three-quarters of the bacteria that you
breathe in at Imperial Beach are coming from aerosolization of raw sewage in
the surf zone,” said Prather. “Coastal water pollution has been traditionally
considered just a waterborne problem. People worry about swimming and surfing
in it but not about breathing it in, even though the aerosols can travel long
distances and expose many more people than those just at the beach or in the
water.”
The team sampled coastal aerosols at Imperial Beach and water from the Tijuana River between January and May 2019. Then they used DNA sequencing and mass spectrometry to link bacteria and chemical compounds in coastal aerosol back to the sewage-polluted Tijuana River flowing into coastal waters.
Aerosols from the ocean were found to contain bacteria and chemicals
originating from the Tijuana River. Now the team is conducting follow-up
research attempting to detect viruses and other airborne pathogens.
Prather and colleagues caution that the work does not mean
people are getting sick from sewage in sea spray aerosol. Most bacteria and
viruses are harmless and the presence of bacteria in sea spray aerosol does not
automatically mean that microbes – pathogenic or otherwise – become airborne.
Infectivity, exposure levels, and other factors that determine risk need
further investigation, the authors said.
This study involved a collaboration among three different
research groups - led by Prather in collaboration with UC San Diego School of
Medicine and Jacobs School of Engineering researcher Rob Knight, and Pieter
Dorrestein of the UC San Diego Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical
Science, both affiliated with the Department of Pediatrics - to study the potential
links between bacteria and chemicals in sea spray aerosol with sewage in the
Tijuana River.
“This research demonstrates that coastal communities are exposed
to coastal water pollution even without entering polluted waters,” said lead
author Matthew Pendergraft, a recent graduate from Scripps Oceanography who
obtained his PhD under the guidance of Prather. “More research is necessary to
determine the level of risk posed to the public by aerosolized coastal water
pollution. These findings provide further justification for prioritizing
cleaning up coastal waters.”
Additional funding to further investigate the conditions that
lead to aerosolization of pollutants and pathogens, how far they travel, and
potential public health ramifications has been secured by Congressman Scott
Peters (CA-50) in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2023 Omnibus spending bill.
Besides Prather, Pendergraft, Knight and Dorrestein, the
research team included Daniel Petras and Clare Morris from Scripps
Oceanography; Pedro Beldá-Ferre, MacKenzie Bryant, Tara Schwartz, Gail
Ackermann, and Greg Humphrey from the UC San Diego School of Medicine; Brock
Mitts from UC San Diego’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry; Allegra
Aron from the UC San Diego Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical
Science; and independent researcher Ethan Kaandorp. The study was funded by UC
San Diego’s Understanding and Protecting the Planet (UPP) initiative and the
German Research Foundation.