Abbreviations

CAC

Catchment Assessment Checklist

EHO

Environmental Health Officer

IANZ

International Accreditation New Zealand

MAC

Microbiological Assessment Category

NZCPS

New Zealand Coastal Policy Statement

RMA

Resource Management Act 1991

SFRG

Suitability for Recreation Grade

SIC

Sanitary Inspection Category

Glossary

Agricultural land use

Land use involving cultivation of land or raising of livestock.

Agricultural run-off

Surface water after rainfall from an area of agricultural land use.

Animal waste

Animal faecal material.

Bacteriological indicators

Micro-organisms selected as indicators of faecal material.

Bathers

Those who enter the water, and either partially or fully immerse themselves.

Bathing season

Generally the bathing season extends between 1 November and 31 March. However, this may vary according to local climatic conditions.

Beach

The shore or any access point to the sea, a freshwater lake or river used for recreational purposes.

Bird-roosting areas

Where birds congregate routinely.

Bush

Fallow areas, predominantly covered with native or exotic bush or scrub.

Catchment

That area of land from which runoff or direct discharges may affect water-quality at a recreational water site.

Category

One of five possible outcomes based on historical microbiological results and potential risk of faecal contamination.

Central tendency

The degree of clustering of the values of a statistical distribution that is usually measured by the arithmetic mean, mode, or median.

Coastal water

Seawater within the outer limits of the territorial sea. Includes seawater with a substantial freshwater component; and seawater in estuaries, fiords, inlets, harbours, or embayments (RMA).

Combined sewer overflows

Where stormwater and sewer overflows are combined.

Communal sewage disposal

Where a number of houses have a combined sewage disposal system.

Contact recreation

Recreational activities that bring people physically in contact with water, involving a risk of involuntary ingestion or inhalation of water (see also Bathers).

Contamination

Reduction in water quality by faecal material, resulting in a breach of guideline values.

Cryptosporidiosis

Diarrhoeal disease caused by oocysts of the protozoa Cryptosporidium parvum.

Direct discharges

Piped or channelled discharge of wastewater concentrated at a given point (point source).

Effluent

The liquid effluent from sewage treatment processes (sometimes called wastewater).

Enterococci

Members of the Streptococcus group of bacteria characterised as faecal in origin.

Enterolert

Trade name of test kit for detecting enterococci.

Environmental hazard assessment

Assessment of risk of potential sources of faecal contamination within a catchment.

Escherichia coli (E. coli)

Member of the Enterobacteriaceae group of bacteria.

Exceedance

When indicator levels from samples taken at a recreational site exceed those recommended in these guidelines.

Exceptional circumstances

Circumstances under which the result of the grading matrix indicates an inconsistency between the Sanitary Inspection Category and the Microbiological Assessment Category, requiring further investigation or analysis.

Feral animal

A wild, untamed animal.

Follow-up sample

Second sample taken to confirm an initial high result; usually within 24–72 hours depending on accessibility/sample turnaround time, etc.

Forest

Area predominantly covered by exotic or native trees.

Freshwater

All water except coastal water and geothermal water (RMA).

Gastroenteritis

Stomach condition causing diarrhoea.

Giardiasis

Clinical condition caused by infection with cysts of Giardia intestinalis.

Graded beaches

Beaches identified by a grade according to their suitability for recreational use, as per these guidelines.

Hazen method

Method for calculating percentile numerical values.

High-contact water sports

Recreational activities that bring people physically in contact with water, involving a risk of involuntary ingestion of water (e.g. swimming, surfing, water skiing, windsurfing).

Human waste

Faecal material.

Median

Central value when values are arranged in order of magnitude.

Membrane filter test

Test to capture bacteria on a filter by means of filtration.

Microbial indicators

Bacteria used as indicators of faecal contamination.

Micro-organisms

Collective term for bacteria, viruses and protozoa.

Middle-range beaches

Beaches with a Suitability for Recreation Grade of good, fair or poor.

Multiple-sample sites

When more than one sample is taken along a beach, either because the beach extends for some distance, or to investigate potential causes of exceedances.

Non-point-source discharge

Diffuse pollution sources (without a single point of origin, or not introduced into a receiving stream from a specific outlet). The pollutants are generally carried off the land by stormwater.

On-site waste treatment

Septic tank.

Pathenogenic micro-organisms

Micro-organisms that can cause disease.

Pathogens

Pathogenic micro-organisms.

Point-source discharge

Piped or channelled discharge of waste water concentrated at a given point.

Potential contamination source

Any feature of the catchment that may contribute human or animal waste that affects the microbiological condition of a recreational site.

Primary treatment

The first major stage of treatment following preliminary treatment in a wastewater works, usually involving removal of settleable solids.

Principal source (of contamination)

The source of faecal contamination that has the greatest effect on recreational water quality.

Private sewage disposal system

Septic tank, long drop (pit privy).

Protozoa

Single-celled micro-organisms.

Rainfall event

A rainfall event is one that has an effect on beach water quality. This may be described in mm of rainfall over time. The definition of rainfall events will vary within and between catchments. Factors such as land use, vegetation cover and catchment size will affect the quality and quantity of water that impacts on a beach. Water managers in each region will need to determine what qualifies as a rainfall event in their region, or maybe even in catchments in their region. Historical data may help to determine the levels of rainfall required to impact on a region’s beaches.

Note: data specific to dry-weather sampling is likely to reflect the most favourable indication of a health risk.

Recreational use

See contact recreation.

Respiratory illness

Cold and flu-like symptoms; may be associated with fever.

Risk

The public health risk when considering beach water quality is the probability of illness occurring. The best available means of predicting the probability of illness occurring at a beach is given by the number of particular indicator bacteria present in the water.

Risk factors

Potential sources of faecal contamination.

Salmonellosis

Disease caused by infection with members of the Salmonella group of bacteria.

Sanitary landfills

Landfills (tips) where sewage sludge is disposed.

Sanitary survey

Survey to detect potential sources of faecal pollution within a catchment.

Secondary treatment

The treatment of waste water, usually after removal of suspended solids, by bacteria under aerobic conditions during which organic matter in solution is oxidised or incorporated into cells, which may be removed by settlement. This may be achieved by biological filtration or by the activated-sludge process. Sometimes called ‘aerobic biological treatment’.

Septic tank

A type of sedimentation tank in which the sludge is retained sufficiently long for the organic content to undergo anaerobic digestion. (When efficient, this equates to secondary treatment.)

Sewage

The liquid wastes of a community, including toilet wastes, sullage and trade wastes. May include stormwater infiltration.

Sewerage

A system of pipes to convey sewage to the place of disposal or treatment. The term ‘sewerage’ is analogous to ‘sewer reticulation’ or ‘drainage system’.

Tertiary treatment

The further treatment of biologically treated waste water by removing suspended matter to enable the effluent to comply with a standard more stringent than 30:20 (not containing more than 30 mg/L suspended solids and with a biological oxygen demand (BOD) not exceeding 20 mg/L) before discharge to a receiving water. Also termed ‘polishing’.

Note: this is not equivalent to disinfection. A system should be described as secondary treatment + disinfection, but not tertiary treatment.

Treated effluent

Effluent that has been through at least primary treatment (see also Primary treatment, Secondary treatment, and Tertiary treatment).

Ungraded beaches

Beaches that are not used for contact recreation and therefore have not been through the grading process.

Wastewater treatment plant

A facility for treating effluent before discharging it into the environment (see also Treated effluent).

Water manager

A generic term used for any person(s) or organisation(s) that make(s) decisions regarding water use or quality, including those that monitor for state of the environment reporting and for public health protection.

Water quality

The bacteriological condition of a water body as it relates to human health, measured using indicator bacteria.

Waterborne pathogen

Disease-causing micro-organisms capable of being transmitted by water.

References and further reading

The following documents are ordered alphabetically by author, then by date, with accompanying commentary.

A librarian can easily obtain most of the items in this list. For those more difficult to access, supplemental information is given on their availability.

Abbott S, Caughley B, Scott G. 1998. Evaluation of Enterolert® for the enumeration of enterococci in the marine environment. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 32: 505–13.
Reports comparative evaluation of Enterolert® versus membrane filtration on 343 marine samples from the Wellington area. Found sensitivity of 99.8% and specificity of 97% (2.4% false positives and 0.3% false negatives).

Alexander LM, Heaven A, Morris R. 1992. Symptomatology of children in contact with sea water contaminated with sewage. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 46: 340–4.
A prospective study of parents of children between 6 and 11 years was conducted at Blackpool beach (UK) in 1990, resulting in 703 cases of matched data. Concluded that “children who came into contact with contaminated sea water are likely to develop symptoms as a result”.

Anderson SA, Turner SJ, Lewis GD. 1997. Enterococci in the New Zealand environment: implications for water quality monitoring. Water Science and Technology 35(11–12): 325–31.
A considerable part of the enterococci load in urban and rural catchments and waterways (typically 102–103 cfu/100 mL) comes from non-human sources. They may multiply within some non-faecal environments (e.g. on degrading seaweed).

Ashbolt NJ, Grohmann GS, Kueh CSW. 1993. Significance of specific bacterial pathogens in the assessment of polluted receiving waters of Sydney, Australia. Water Science and Technology 27(3–4): 449–52.
Primary sewage released from Sydney’s ocean outfalls and tertiary chlorinated sewage discharged to rivers were studied for two years. Diverting the ocean discharge from a cliff-edge release to deepwater ocean release 3 km offshore resulted in significant reductions of bacteria in water, but not in near-shore sediments. Campylobacters were found in rivers but not in effluents or seawater, being associated with rural land.

Balarajan R, Soni Raleigh V, Yuen P, Wheeler D, Machin D, Cartwright R. 1989. Health risks associated with bathing in sea water. British Medical Journal 303: 1444–5.
Reports a three-week prospective cohort study at Ramsgate Beach (Kent, UK) using 1,883 persons, including 839 non-bathers as a control. The waters occasionally failed EC standards (but this is not quantified). Relative risk of gastrointestinal symptoms (age- and gender-adjusted) was elevated among the bathers (i.e. swimmers and waders). Relative risks of eye/ear/nose/throat and respiratory illness among surfers and divers were statistically significant.

Bandaranayake DR, Salmond CE, Cooper AB, McBride GB, Lewis GD, Hatton C, Turner SJ, Till DG. 1993. Health Effects from Sea Bathing: A report on the preliminary study carried out at two Auckland beaches over the 1992/93 summer. Ministry for the Environment, Wellington.
Reports on the New Zealand 1992/93 preliminary trials. Includes the paper, the questionnaire, and a sample size calculation (power analysis) for the planned final study.

Barron RC, Murphy F, Greenberg HB, Davis CE, Bregman DJ, Gary GW, Hughes JM, Schonberger LB. 1982. Norwalk gastrointestinal illness: an outbreak associated with swimming in a recreational lake and secondary person-to-person transmission. American Journal of Epidemiology 115(2): 163–72.
Incubation period for 121 first-in-their-household persons becoming ill at a Michigan recreational park was 4–77 hours. A history of swimming in the park’s lake was elicited with significantly greater frequency of illness compared to those who did not swim (odds ratio 4.8, 95% CI = 1.8–12.7). Serological studies identified Norwalk virus as the aetiological agent. Water appeared to meet current bacterial guidelines.

Baylor ER, Baylor MB, Blanchard DC, Syzdek LD, Appel C. 1977. Virus transfer from surf to wind. Science 198: 575–80.
Documents this mode of pathogen transfer.

Brieseman MA. 1987. Town water supply as the cause of an outbreak of Campylobacter infection. New Zealand Medical Journal 100: 212–13.
An outbreak of 19 cases in Ashburton was attributed to the local water supply being contaminated after heavy rain during a period in which water treatment was temporarily not operating.

Brown JM, Campbell EA, Rickards AD, Wheeler D. 1987. Sewage pollution of bathing water. The Lancet (21 November): 1208–9.
Reports a Greenpeace study on two southern England resorts, one polluted the other not, interviewing 190 people. Found that “bathers who immersed their heads in seawater polluted by sewage were more likely to complain of gastrointestinal symptoms than those who did not immerse their heads or those who bathed at a non-polluted resort”.

Bryan JA, Lehmann JD, Setiady IF, Hatch MH. 1974. An outbreak of Hepatitis-A associated with recreational lake water. American Journal of Epidemiology 99(2): 145–54.
In a 15-day period in September 1969, 14 cases of viral hepatitis-A developed in members of a boy scout troop who had been camping on an island in a lake recreation area about four weeks earlier. Exposure to contaminated lake water was indicated.

Cabelli VJ, Levin MA, Dufour AP, McCabe LJ. 1975. The development of criteria for recreational waters. In: ALH Gameson (ed). Discharge of Sewage from Sea Outfalls. Oxford and New York, Pergamon Press, 63–73.
Foreshadows the full trials reported in Cabelli (1983a). Explains how the design was aimed at improving perceived shortcomings in the 1940s study reported by Stevenson (1953), including: ‘swimming’ to require head-immersion, multiple exposures to be avoided, non-bather controls to be beach attenders, include more candidate indicators. Notes that studies need to be large enough to obtain “significant results”.

Cabelli VJ. 1977. Indicators of recreational water quality. In: AW Hoadley and BJ Dukta (eds) Bacterial Indicators/Health Hazards Associated with Water. ASTM STP 635, American Society for Testing and Materials, Washington: 222–38.
An early review of Cabelli’s approach. Points to the need to develop a scientific basis for standards applicable to waters containing faecal wastes of lower animals (from waterfowl, wild animals, farm run-off and urban stormwater). Reports results from New York component of the full study reported by Cabelli (1983a).

Cabelli VJ. 1978. New standards for enteric bacteria. In: R Mitchell (ed) Water Pollution Microbiology, Vol 2. Wiley, New York: 233–71.
Covers risk assessment, drinking water, swimming pool water, recreational waters and shellfish-growing waters. Reviews each area up to the mid-1970s.

Cabelli VJ. 1979. Evaluation of recreational water quality, the EPA approach. In: A James and L Evison (eds) Biological Indicators of Water Quality. Wiley, Chichester, 14-1–14-23.
Discusses EPA’s use of “criteria”, “guidelines” and “standards”: a criterion is a relationship (e.g. between indicator density and illness risk); a guideline is a suggested upper limit, derived from the criterion; and a standard is a guideline with the force of law. The beach studies underway were designed to provide criteria.

Cabelli VJ, Dufour AP, Levin MA, McCabe LJ, Haberman PW. 1979. Relationship of microbiological indicators to health effects at marine bathing beaches. American Journal of Public Health 69(7): 690–6.
Reports results of second year for the New York part of the full study reported by Cabelli (1983a).

Cabelli VJ, Dufour AP, McCabe LJ, Levin MA. 1982. Swimming-associated gastroenteritis and water quality. American Journal of Epidemiology 115: 606–16.
Reports main results of Cabelli (1983a). Concludes that “swimming in even marginally polluted marine bathing water is a significant route of transmission for the observed gastroenteritis”.

Cabelli VJ. 1983a. Health Effects Criteria for Marine Recreational Waters. Report EPA 600/1-80-031, USEPA Cincinnati, OH (first published 1980). NTIS access #: PB 83-259994.
Major prospective epidemiological study at coastal beaches in New York and Boston, and a brackish beach at Lake Ponchartrain (Louisiana), involving 26,686 persons. Beaches were impacted by (mostly) chlorinated effluents. Most notable result was a relationship between swimming-associated illness risk and (the logarithm of) enterococci concentration. The illness was HCGI (highly credible gastro-intestinal illness, essentially vomiting or GI accompanied by fever). Analysis methods used data grouping followed by linear regression, rather than the more modern “generalized linear models” (e.g. logistic regression); appropriate software was not then available. Also includes a 1976–78 study in Alexandria, Egypt. Some beaches were very polluted (enterococci up to 104 per 100 mL). Egyptian participants included 12,532 locals and 10,707 visitors (from Cairo). Only E. coli and enterococci were measured, both showing strong associations with highly credible gastrointestinal illness. For equivalent enterococci concentrations illness risks were lower than found in the US studies, attributed to local immunity (Cairo visitors appeared to be less immune). Four cases of typhoid were found among swimmers at the polluted beach.

Cabelli VJ. 1983b. Public health and water quality significance of viral diseases transmitted by drinking water and recreational water. Water Science & Technology 15(5):1–15.
Presents predictions of gastrointestinal illness at beaches using the relationships derived in Cabelli (1983a). Notes the inapplicability of the model to beaches with small immediate waste sources, and local outbreaks.

Cabelli VJ, Dufour AP, McCabe LJ, Levin MA. 1983. A marine recreational water quality criterion consistent with indicator concepts and risk analysis. Journal of the Water Pollution Control Federation 55: 1306–14.
Presents the health effects enterococci indicator relationship derived in Cabelli (1983a). Companion paper to Cabelli et al (1982).

Cabelli VJ. 1989. Swimming-associated illness and recreational water quality criteria. Water Science and Technology 21(2): 13–21.
Presents the application of results in Cabelli (1983a) by USEPA (1986b). Contains an error in the intercept term (‘0.02’ in Table E1 should be ‘0.2’). States the expectation that contamination of water with faecal wastes from lower animals would carry a much lower risk of illness than from humans.

Calderon RL, Mood EW. 1982. An epidemiological assessment of water quality and ‘swimmer’s ear’. Archives of Environmental Health 37(5): 300–5.
A retrospective study of otitis externa in 1980 on 29 cases and controls finding that swimming and length of time spent in the water were associated positively with cases of otitis externa. No significant correlation of the illness with water quality was found (faecal coliforms, enterococci, Pseudomonas aeruginosa).

Calderon RL, Mood EW, Dufour AP. 1991. Health effects of swimmers and nonpoint sources of contaminated water. International Journal of Environmental Health Research 1: 21–31.
Reports a diary illness study of users of freshwater ponds impacted only by animal wastes. Gastrointestinal illness was related to the number of swimmers and to staphylococcal counts. “Swimmer illness was not associated with high densities of common faecal indicator bacteria ...”.

Carrie MS. 1973. Coliforms and water quality legislation. Soil and Water 10(2): 20–3.
Gives some explanation of how the standards in the 1971 Water and Soil Conservation Amendment Act (No. 2) came to pass.

Cheung WHS, Chang KCK, Hung RPS, Kleevens JWL. 1990. Health effects of beach water pollution in Hong Kong. Epidemiology and Infection 105: 139–62.
Reports on a 1987 prospective study at nine Hong Kong beaches using 18,741 useable responses. E. coli was found to be the best indicator of health effects (gastrointesteritis and skin symptom rates) among swimmers. Overall symptom rates for gastrointestinal, ear, eye, skin, respiratory, fever and total illness was (statistically) significantly higher for swimmers than for non-swimmers. Low gastrointestinal illness rates were observed at the two beaches impacted by animal wastes. Concludes that illness associated with swimming is a public health problem in Hong Kong. While this study reported low gastro-intestinal swimming-associated rates at the two beaches influenced by livestock (pig) wastes, respiratory illness and skin infections rates were elevated such that the total illness rate was very similar to the other beaches.

Cheung WHS, Chang KCK, Hung RPS. 1991. Variations in microbial indicator densities in beach waters and health-related assessment of bathing water quality. Epidemiology and Infection 106: 329–44.
Describes daily and hourly variations in microbial indicators. E. coli was influenced by tide, by staphylococci and by the number of bathers. Average staphylococci: E. coli ratio was 0.04:3. Staphylococci serve as an indicator of bather density and risk of cross-contamination between bathers. Recommends weekend sampling for compliance assessment.

Chung H, Jaykus L-A, Lovelace G, Sobsey MD. 1998. Bacteriophages and bacteria as indicators of enteric viruses in oysters and their harvest waters. Water Science and Technology 38(12): 37–44.
Concentrations of male-specific (F+) coliphages, Bacteroides fragilis phages, Salmonella phages and several indicator bacteria in wastewater, estuarine receiving water and its oysters were examined at 2–4-week intervals for 14 months. The levels of most indicators were higher in oysters and water when oysters were virus-positive. F+ coliphages and C. perfringens were the only indicators significantly associated with the presence of enteric viruses in oysters.

Conover WJ. 1980. Practical Nonparametric Statistics. 2nd ed. Wiley, New York.
The best introduction to this class of methods, whereby data ranks are used in place of their actual magnitudes (e.g. medians and percentiles).

Corbett SJ, Rubin GL, Curry GK, Kleinbaum DG, et al 1993. The health effects of swimming at Sydney beaches. American Journal of Public Health 83(12): 1701–6.
Reports follow-up study of 2,839 beach-goers in 1989/90; 683 reported experiencing symptoms in the 10 days following initial interview, of whom 435 reported respiratory symptoms. A linear relationship between water pollution and all reported symptoms (except gastrointestinal) was shown.

Cornax R, Morinigo MA, Balebona C, Castro D, Borrego JJ. 1991. Significance of several bacteriophage groups as indicators of sewage pollution in marine waters. Water Research 25: 673–8.
From a two-beach study this documents a poor correlation between FRNA phages and pathogen occurrence and persistence. Concludes that faecal streptococci and E. coli “C bacteriophages” are the most appropriate indicators of remote pollution in marine waters.

Dadswell JV. 1993. Microbiological quality of coastal water and its health effects. International Journal of Environmental Health Research 3: 32–46.
Reviews health-related marine microbiology, both natural and pollution-related organisms.

D’Alessio D, Minot TE, Allen CI, Tsiatis AA, Nelson DB. 1981. A study of the proportions of swimmers among well controls and children with enterovirus-like illness shedding or not shedding an enterovirus. American Journal of Epidemiology 113(5): 533–41.
A retrospective study of children visiting a paediatric clinic in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1977: 679 well children and 296 with enteroviral-like symptoms. Exclusive beach swimmers had significantly (p < 0.0005) relative risk (odds ratio estimate 3.41) of enterovirus illness. The highest relative risk (10.63) of enterovirus illness occurred in children less than four years old who were exclusive beach swimmers.

Davies-Colley RJ, Bell RG, Donnison AM. 1994. Sunlight inactivation of enterococci and fecal coliforms in sewage effluent diluted in seawater. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 60: 2049–58.
Two parameters are required to describe the inactivation (loss of culturability): a shoulder constant and a rate constant. Depth-dependent inactivation rate for both indicators matched the attenuation profile of UV-A radiation at about 360 nm (attributable to inactivation maxima in the 318–340 and > 400 nm ranges, Sinton et al 1994). Inactivation by UV-B (290–320 nm, which penetrates less into seawater) is of lesser importance.

Davies-Colley RJ, Donnison AM, Speed DJ. 1997. Sunlight wavelengths inactivating faecal indicator micro-organisms in waste stabilisation ponds. Water Science and Technology 35(11–12): 219–25.
UVB, UVA and blue-green (< 550 nm) radiation all contributed to inactivation of enterococci and (possibly) FRNA phage, consistent with a photo-oxidation mechanism. In contrast, E. coli and (possibly) FDNA phage were inactivated mainly by UVB in these freshwaters. Results suggest E. coli may be a better freshwater indicator than enterococci.

Davies-Colley RJ, Donnison AM, Speed DJ, Ross CM, Nagels JW. 1999. Inactivation of faecal indicator microorganisms in waste stabilisation ponds: Interactions of environmental factors with sunlight. Water Res 33: 1220–30.
Sunlight exposure is considered to be the most important cause of “natural” disinfection in waste stabilisation ponds (WSPs). The influence of dissolved oxygen (DO), pH, and particulate and dissolved constituents in WSP effluent, on sunlight inactivation of faecal micro-organisms, using small reactors operated under controlled physico-chemical conditions was examined. Inactivation of both enterococci and F-RNA phages increased strongly as DO was increased, and also depended on light-absorbing pond-water constituents, but pH was not influential over the range investigated (7.5 to 10). Inactivation of E. coli increased strongly when pH increased above 8.5, as well as being strongly dependent on DO. Inactivation of F-DNA phage was independent of the factors investigated. These results are consistent with the F-DNA phages being inactivated as a result of direct DNA damage by UVB in sunlight, whereas the other three microbiological indicators are inactivated as a result of photo-oxidative damage, although the target of damage is apparently different. Our findings of diverse influences of physico-chemical conditions suggest difficulties in interpreting data for a single micro-organism to indicate WSP effluent quality. However, sunlight remains the factor of overriding importance, and disinfection in WSPs may be enhanced by increasing sunlight exposure.

Deely J, Hodges S, McIntosh J, Bassett D. 1997. Enterococcal numbers measured in waters of marine, lake, and river swimming sites of the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 31: 89–101.
Reports enterococci numbers for 32 coastal beaches, 23 lake beaches and 31 river swimming holes, using medians of five samples. Most marine, lake and up-river sites had low enterococci counts, complying with current guidelines, but mid-river and lowland river reaches tended to breach those guidelines.

Department of Health. 1992. Provisional Microbiological Water Quality Guidelines for Recreational and Shellfish-gathering Waters in New Zealand. Department of Health, Public Health Services, Wellington.
Previous guidelines, issued in response to a number of authorities beginning to use the USEPA (1986b) criteria. These guidelines attempted to interpret those criteria in terms of New Zealand conditions.

Disinfection Review Group. 2002. Pilot Study: Pilot plant investigations, surrogate study results and recommendations. Final report to Watercare Services Ltd, Auckland, June.
Reports on an extensive set of trials examining inactivation rates of a number of faecal indicators and pathogens in a pilot plant mimicking the processes to be used in the upgraded Mangere Wastewater Treatment Plant. Demonstrates decreasing correlations between indicators and pathogens (enteroviruses) as the level of treatment is increased.

Donnison AM, Cooper RN. 1990. Enumeration of faecal coliforms and Escherichia coli in New Zealand receiving waters and effluents. Environmental Technology 11: 1123–7.
Describes mTEC membrane filtration method for enumeration of faecal coliforms and E. coli (as a subsequent step). Compares the method favourably to alternatives (MPN and mFC).

Donnison AM. 1992. Enumeration of enterococci in New Zealand waters and effluents. Environmental Technology 13: 771–8.
Compares an in-house MPN method to the USEPA Membrane Filter Method, suggesting it as a desirable method for enumerating enterococci in effluents (particularly if they are minimally treated).

Donnison AM, Ross CM. 1995. Somatic and F-specific coliphages in New Zealand waste treatment lagoons. Water Research 29(4):
1105–10.
Concludes that the FRNA:FDNA coliphage ratio may distinguish between animal and human faecal material.

Donnison AM, Ross CM. 1999. Animal and human faecal pollution in New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 33: 119–28.
Sentinel freshwater mussels were placed in rivers impacted by faecal pollution. E. coli were recovered from all sites (including a forest control site) but were highest at sites impacted by treated sewage, meat-processing wastes or dairy farm inputs. The pathogens measured (Campylobacter jejuni, E. coli, Salmonella typhimurium, Yersinia enterocolitica) were recovered from mussels – except at the control site. Untreated wastewaters (sheep, beef, human sewage) all indicated the presence of these pathogens, mostly in more than half the samples. Thermophilic Campylobacters “are likely to remain after secondary treatment of either meat plant waste water or sewage”.

Dufour AP. 1984. Health Effects Criteria for Fresh Recreational Waters. Report EPA 600/1-84.004, USEPA Cincinnati, OH. NTIS access #: PB 85-150878.
Major prospective epidemiological study at lake beaches in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Erie, Pennsylvania, involving 34,598 persons. Most notable result was a relationship between “swimming-associated pollution-related illness risk” and (the logarithm of) E. coli and enterococci concentrations. The association with E. coli was the stronger of the two. The illness was HCGI (highly credible gastro-intestinal illness, being GI accompanied by fever). Analysis methods used data grouping followed by linear regression, rather than the more modern “generalized linear models” (e.g. logistic regression); appropriate software was not available. Also reports results of Egyptian studies, but these were not included in their final analysis.

Dutka BJ. 1979. Microbiological indicators, problems and potential of new microbial indicators of water quality. In: A James and L Evison (eds) Biological Indicators of Water Quality. Wiley and Sons, London.
Reviews alternatives, each of which may signal contamination.

Eberhart-Phillips J, Walker N, Garrett N, Bell D, Sinclair D, Rainger W, Bates M. 1997. Campylobacteriosis in New Zealand: results of a case-control study. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 51: 686–91.
Reports a study on 621 people with notified illness between June 1994 and February 1995 in Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington and Christchurch. Found undercooked chicken to be a strong risk factor. Rainwater as a source at home was a lesser factor. Recreational water use appears not to have been in the questionnaire.

EEC. 1976. Council Directive of 8 December 1975 concerning the quality of bathing water (76/160/EEC). Official Journal of the European Communities. No. L31/1–7. Available at: http://europa.eu.int/freshwater/water-bathing/directiv.html.
Documents the EEC bathing water directive. Imperative standards require 95% of fortnightly samples to not exceed 10,000 total coliforms per 100 mL or 2000 faecal coliforms per 100 mL. If inspection shows that other substances may be present, or that water quality has deteriorated, then there should be zero Salmonella per litre and zero enterovirus per 10 litres in 95% of samples (sampling frequency unspecified). Guideline values require 80% of fortnightly samples to not exceed 500 total coliforms per 100 mL or 100 faecal coliforms per 100 mL. If inspection shows that the substances may be present, or that water quality has deteriorated, then 80% of samples should not exceed 100 faecal streptococci per 100 mL (sampling frequency unspecified). There are other limits on pH, colour, mineral oils, surface-active substances, phenols, transparency, dissolved oxygen, tarry residues and floatables (fortnightly sampling being required for colour, mineral oils, surface-active substances, phenols, transparency, tarry residues and floatables). The following should be checked if there is a tendency toward eutrophication: ammonia and Kjeldahl nitrogen. If inspection shows that other substances may be present, or that water quality has deteriorated, then sampling is required for pesticides, heavy metals, cyanides, nitrates and phosphates.

EEC. 1979. Council Directive of 30 October 1979 on the quality required of shellfish waters. Official Journal of the European Communities. No. L 281/47–49 plus annex. Details, with amendment 391L0692, at:
http://europa.eu.int/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexapi!prod!
CELEXnumdoc&lg=en&numdoc=31991L0692&model=guichett.

EHD. 1980. A Study of Disease Incidence and Recreational Water Quality in the Great Lakes. Phase I. Report 81-EHD-67. Environmental Health Directorate, Health Protection Branch, Health and Welfare, Ottawa, Canada (prepared by The University of Toronto).
A prospective study using 6,166 interviews, of whom 65% were swimmers at lake beaches. Swimmers were found to have higher morbidity risks. Main feature was evidence of bather-to-bather transmission of infections (strongest association was with Staphylococci).

El-Sharkawi F, Hassan MNER. 1979. The relation between the state of pollution in Alexandria swimming beaches and the occurrence of typhoid among bathers. Bulletin of the High Institute of Public Health of Alexandria IX:
337–51. (Reprinted by the Alexandria University Press, 1980.) Report obtainable from G McBride, NIWA, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Reports on a 1976 retrospective study of hospital inpatients. Concludes that “there is a significant risk of contracting Typhoid from bathing in the polluted water and the mostly affected were the young age group”. Sewer outfalls discharged raw material directly to some beaches.

Elliot EL, Colwell RR. 1985. Indicator organisms for estuarine and marine waters. FEMS Microbiology Reviews 32: 61–79.
Documents finding the presence of pathogens in waters and shellfish when faecal coliforms are either absent or in low numbers.

Elliott AH. 1998. Prediction of illness risk near ocean outfalls using frequency distributions of bacterial concentrations. Water Research 32(10): 3182–7.
Presents a method for combining temporal concentration frequency distribution with a concentration–response relation to obtain an averaged illness rate, applied to North Shore (Auckland).

Ellis JC, Lacey RF. 1980. Sampling: defining the task and planning the scheme. Water Pollution Control 79: 452–67; discussion: 482–4.
Wide review of sampling programme design. Discusses statistics of assessing compliance with percentile standards, where the percentile refers to a percentage of time (not of samples).

EU. 1994. Proposal for a Council Directive concerning the quality of bathing water. Official Journal of the European Communities. No. C 112/3–10. Available at: http://europa.eu.int/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexapi!prod!
CELEXnumdoc&lg=en&numdoc=51994PC0036&model=guichett.
Clarifies method of compliance assessment and proposes revised quality requirements based on E. coli, faecal streptococci, enteroviruses (bacteriophages mentioned, but no limits are proposed). Compliance is to be assessed using look-up tables (e.g. for an imperative standard, 95% percentile are assessed by allowing no exceedances in 19 samples, one exceedance in between 20 and 39 samples, etc). The imperative 95% percentile limits for E. coli and faecal streptococci are 2000 and 400 per 100 mL respectively, and for enteroviruses it remains at 0 pfu/10 L.

Fattal B, Vasl RJ, Katzenelson E, Shuval HI. 1983. Survival of bacterial indicator organisms and enteric viruses in the Mediterranean coastal waters off Tel-Aviv. Water Research 17: 397–402.
Reports ‘die-away’ studies on coliforms and enteric viruses offshore from Tel Aviv. Concentrations of total coliforms, faecal coliforms and faecal streptococci were correlated with enterovirus concentrations (though not all correlations were statistically significant). Faecal streptococci displayed a similar die-away rate to enteroviruses; the other bacteria reduced more quickly. About 76% of positive enterovirus samples were found at beaches within ‘safe’ levels, as indicated.

Fattal B, Peleg-Olevsky E, Yoshpe-Purer Y, Shuval HI. 1986. The association between morbidity among bathers and microbial quality of seawater. Water Science and Technology 18(11): 59–69.
Reports a prospective epidemiological study at three Tel Aviv coastal beaches in 1983, comprising 2,231 persons (23% below four years of age). Strongest finding was symptoms of enteric morbidity among swimmers, particularly the 0–4-year-olds, related to elevated levels of enterococci, E. coli and staphylococci (not faecal coliforms). Swimmers had more morbidity of all types of symptoms (enteric, respiratory, others) than non-swimmers.

Fattal B, Peleg-Olevsky E, Agursky T, Shuval HI. 1987. The association between seawater pollution as measured by bacterial indicators and morbidity among bathers at Mediterranean bathing beaches of Israel. Chemosphere 16(2/3): 565–70.
A briefer description of the 1983 study than that given by Fattal et al (1986).

Fattal B, Peleg-Olevsky E, Cabelli VJ. 1991. Bathers as a possible source of contamination for swimming-associated illness at marine bathing beaches. International Journal of Environmental Health Research 1: 204–14.
Further analysis of the 1983 study. Notes that the best association between an indicator and swimmers’ illness is with Staphylococcus aureus (rather than enterococcus or E. coli), suggesting bather-to-bather contamination as a dominant mechanism.

Favero MS. 1985. Microbiological indicators of health risks associated with swimming. American Journal of Public Health 75(9): 1051–3.
Reviews the history of this topic up to 1985 (Seyfried et al’s papers were in this issue). Notes that faecal coliforms may now be regarded as “relatively useless for judging the safety of natural bathing waters”. Notes also the USEPA promulgated a proposal that the criteria be set at 20 enterococci per 100 mL or 77 E. coli per 100 mL for freshwaters or only three enterococci per 100 mL for marine waters (Federal Register May 1984, 49(102): 21987–8). These limits were revised upward after feedback from professionals, many of whom suggested that the proposed limits were too stringent (Federal Register February 1986, 51(45): 8012–16).

Fayer R, Graczyk TK, Lewis EJ, Trout JM, Farley CA. 1998. Survival of infectious Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in seawater and Eastern oysters (Crassostrea viginica) in the Chesapeake Bay. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 64(3): 1070–4.
Oocysts placed in artificial seawater were infectious for up to 12 weeks. Oysters sampled from natural waters contained infectious oocysts and can serve as mechanical vectors of this organism.

Ferguson CM, Coote BG, Ashbolt NJ, Stevenson AM. 1996. Relationships between indicators, pathogens and water quality in an estuarine system. Water Research 30(9): 2045–54.
Water and sediment sampling for a range of indicators and pathogens is reported for an urban estuary in Sydney, Australia. Significant increases of faecal coliforms, faecal streptococci, Clostridium perfringens spores, F-RNA bacteriophage, Aeromonas spp., Giardia and Cryptosporidium spp. occurred in the water after rain, but only faecal coliforms showed significant increases in the sediments. Isolations of enteric viruses were sporadic and not exclusively related to wet weather events. C. perfringens was identified as the most useful indicator of faecal pollution.

Ferley JP, Zmirou D, Balducci F, Baleux B, Fera P, Larbaigt G, Jacq E, Moissonnier B, Blineau A, Boudot J. 1989. Epidemiological significance of microbiological pollution criteria for river recreational waters. International Journal of Epidemiology 18: 198–205.
Reports a retrospective 1986 follow-up study in the Ardèche basin using 5737 tourists in eight holiday camps. Found a relative risk of 2.3 (95% CI = 1.7–3.2) for “objective” gastrointestinal cases (requires vomiting or diarrhoea). Faecal streptococci were best correlated to morbidity, with threshold 20 per 100 mL.

Fewtrell L, Godfree AF, Jones F, Kay D, Salmon RL, Wyer MD. 1992. Health effects of white-water canoeing. The Lancet 339: 1587–9.
Reports a prospective cohort study using 516 canoeists on two channels with different degrees of pollution: arithmetic mean enterovirus 198 and 0 pfu/L and geometric mean faecal coliforms 285 and 22/dL for streams A and B. Between five and seven days after exposure canoeists using stream A had significantly higher incidences of gastrointestinal and upper respiratory symptoms than either canoeists using stream B or non-exposed controls (spectators).

Fewtrell L, Kay D, Salmon RL, Wyer MD, Newman G, Bowering G. 1994. The health effects of low-contact water activities in fresh and estuarine waters. Journal of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management 8: 97–101.
Four studies were carried out at separate locations (two freshwater and two estuarine) using about 1000 participants in marathons and canoeing. Geometric mean faecal coliforms ranged from 62 to 4613 per 100 mL. Comparison of exposed and unexposed groups five – seven days after exposure showed minimal health effects for the low water-contact sports.

Figueras MJ, Polo F, Inza I, Guarro J. 1997. Past, present and future perspectives of the EU bathing water directive. Marine Pollution Bulletin 34(3): 148–56.
Reviews reasons put forward for changes to the 1976 standards (EEC 1976) and recent proposals.

Figueras MJ, Robertson W, Pike EB, Ashbolt NJ, Borrego JJ. 2000. Sanitary inspection and microbiological water quality. In: J Bartram, G Rees (eds). Monitoring Bathing Waters: A practical guide to the design and implementation of assessments and monitoring programmes. London, E & FN Spons, 113–67. Published on behalf of the World Health Organization, Commission of the European Communities and US Environmental Protection Agency.

Fleisher JM, McFadden RT. 1980. Obtaining precise estimates in coliform enumeration. Water Research 14: 477–83.
Argues for increasing precision in coliform enumerations by replication of sampling.

Fleisher JM. 1985. Implications of coliform variability in the assessment of the sanitary quality of recreational waters. Journal of Hygiene (Cambridge) 94: 193–200.
Reanalysed New York coliform compliance data, showing the impact of lack of precision. Within-day variations were identified.

Fleisher JM. 1990a. Conducting recreational water quality surveys: Some problems and suggested remedies. Marine Pollution Bulletin 21(2): 562–7.
Discusses need to account for measurement error and temporal within-day variability of microbiological examinations. Argues it is better to maximise replications instead of sample dates.

Fleisher JM. 1990b. The effects of measurement error on previously reported mathematical relationships between indicator organism density and swimming associated illness: a quantitative estimate of the resulting bias. International Journal of Epidemiology 19(4): 1100–6.
Uses computer simulations to demonstrate the effect of measurement error on indicator–health risk relationships. Underestimation of health risks was shown. Recommendations for future study designs were made.

Fleisher JM. 1991. A re-analysis of data supporting US federal bacteriological water quality criteria governing marine recreational waters. Research Journal WPCF 63(3): 259–65.
Criticises the USEPA criteria for including brackish water (Lake Ponchartrain, Louisiana), and reanalyses the data using logistic regression. Some aspects of the reanalysis are also open to question in our opinion (especially the weight put on Boston data beyond their range).

Fleisher JM. 1992. US Federal bacteriological water quality standards: a re-analysis. In: D Kay (ed) Recreational Water Quality Management. Vol. 1, Coastal Waters. New York, Ellis Horwood, 113–28.
Criticises the USEPA criterion’s basis for incorporating three different relationships (for the three beaches) developed by the author, using logistic regression.

Fleisher JM, Jones F, Kay D, Morano R. 1993. Setting recreational water quality criteria. In: D Kay and R Hanbury (eds). Recreational Water Quality Management. Vol. 2. Fresh Water. New York, Ellis Horwood, 123–36.
Identifies sources of bias probably incorporated in previous epidemiological studies, and promotes methods to minimise them.

Fleisher JM, Jones F, Kay D, Stanwell-Smith R, Wyer MD, Morano R. 1993. Water and non-water related risk factors for gastroenteritis among bathers exposed to sewage contaminated marine waters. International Journal of Epidemiology 22: 698–708.
Finds three faults in previous epidemiological studies, being failures to: account for within-day and spatial variability at beaches, relate indicator concentration to an individual bather, and rigorously control non-water-related risk factors. Results of two “intervention follow-up studies” (controlled-cohort trials) are reported. These were at Langland Bay (109 bathers and 124 non-bathers) and Moreton Beach (97 bathers and 154 non-bathers). Faecal streptococci (and not faecal coliforms) were associated with bathers’ gastrointestinal illness, and only for chest-depth samples (two shallower sampling depths were used): “excess risk among bathers did not occur until exposure to waters containing 40–59 faecal streptococci/100 mL”.

Fleisher JM, Kay D, Salmon RL, Jones F, Wyer MD, Godfree AF. 1996. Marine waters contaminated with domestic sewage, non-enteric illnesses associated with bather exposure in the United Kingdom. American Journal of Public Health 86(9): 1228–34.
Reports on results from all four UK controlled-cohort studies using 1216 healthy adult volunteers (average age about 32 years). Intensive water-quality monitoring was used to assign possible health-risk indicators (all bacteria) to individual bathers. Faecal streptococci exposure (threshold 60 per 100 mL) was predictive of acute febrile respiratory illness (which must include fever), while faecal coliform exposure (threshold 100 per 100 mL) was predictive of ear ailments. Bathers were at higher risk for eye ailments.

Fleisher JM, Kay D, Wyer MD, Merrett H. 1996. The enterovirus test in the assessment of recreational water-associated gastroenteritis. Water Research 30(10): 2341–6.
Uses polychotomous logistic regression on 2066 parallel faecal streptococci and enterovirus enumerations from 416 UK locations. Found that the actual viruses enumerated by the assay are not aetiologically related to recreational water-associated gastroenteritis. Suggest that enterovirus assay may be of limited use in assessing marine recreational water quality.

Fleisher JM, Kay D, Wyer MD, Godfree AF. 1998. Estimates of the severity of illnesses associated with bathing in marine recreational waters contaminated with domestic sewage. International Journal of Epidemiology 27: 722–6.
Reviews findings of the four UK controlled-cohort trials. Concludes that “illness associated with bathing in marine waters contaminated with domestic sewage can no longer be viewed as minor, and indeed can have a substantial impact on the public health”.

Foulon G, Maurin J, Quoi N, Martin-Boyer G. 1983. Relationship between the microbial quality of water and health effects. Revue Francaise des Sciences de L’Eau 2: 127–43.
Beach interviews of 4,921 persons at five coastal beaches were followed by an answer card (only 1532 persons did so). The study indicates that an answer card system should be avoided. See also the review by Shuval (1986).

Fraser GG, Cooke KR. 1991. Epidemic giardiasis and municipal water supply. American Journal of Public Health 81(6): 760–2.
Compares reported rates of giardiasis in Dunedin (New Zealand) for two 10-month periods. The city had two water supplies, one “unfiltered” (microstrained, 23 mm) and the other a modern plant with dual filters (anthracite and silica sand). Found incidence rate-ratio of 3.3 (90% CI = 1.1, 10.1, 49 cases). A parallel case-control study found an odds ratio of 1.8 (90% CI = 0.5, 6.5). These results do not achieve “statistical significance” at the 95% level, but are suggestive of transmission of Giardia via water.

Furfari SA. 1968. History of the 70 MPN/100 mL standard. Memo, Northeast Marine Health Services Laboratory, USA.
Documents the history of the 70 MPN per 100 mL shellfish-gathering water standard, as used by the US Public Health Service. The calculation was based on a requirement that no more than 50% of 1 mL portions were positive for coliforms, equivalent to an MPN of about 70 per 100 mL. (Available only from G McBride, NIWA, Hamilton, New Zealand.)

Gameson ALH, Gould DJ. 1975. Effects of solar radiation on the mortality of some terrestrial bacteria in sea water. In: ALH Gameson (ed) Discharge of Sewage from Sea Outfalls. Pergamon Press, Oxford and New York, 209–19.
Rate of die-off of coliforms in water is much greater in daylight than in the dark. Die-off of E. coli was slower than that of total coliforms. Reports seminal work on this topic.

Gameson ALH. 1979. EEC directive on quality of bathing water. Water Pollution Control 78(2): 206–14.
Notes some practical difficulties in implementing the EEC Directive (EEC 1976).

Geldreich EE. 1978. Bacterial populations and indicator concepts in feces, sewage, stormwater and solid wastes. In: G Berg (ed) Indicators of Viruses in Water and Food. Ann Arbor Science, Ann Arbor, Mich., 51–97.
Substantial review of literature up to the late 1970s.

Gibson CJ, Stadterman KL, States S, Sykora J. 1998. Combined sewer overflows: a source of Cryptosporidium and Giardia. Water Science and Technology 38(12): 67–72.
Combined overflows were found to contribute both parasites in dry and (particularly) wet weather.

Gilbert RO. 1987. Statistical Methods for Environmental Pollution Monitoring. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
This is an excellent book on many aspects of statistical interpretation of pollution data. Particularly strong on the log-normal distribution, which is often followed by microbiological particles.

Godfree A, Jones F, Kay D. 1990. Recreational water quality: the management of environmental health risks associated with sewage discharges. Marine Pollution Bulletin 9: 414–22.
Reviews past studies and claims the 1986 USEPA “standards” do not have a firm scientific foundation.

Goodman SN. 1993. p values, hypothesis tests, and likelihood: implications for epidemiology of a neglected historical debate. American Journal of Epidemiology 137(5): 485–96.
Discusses valid and invalid conclusions from significance tests and hypothesis tests.

Grabow WOK, Idema GK, Coubrough P, Bateman BW. 1989. Selection of indicator systems for human viruses in polluted seawater and shellfish. Water Science and Technology 21(3): 111–17.
Analysed 610 samples of sewage, polluted seawater and shellfish. Ratios of indicators:viruses varied considerably. Recommends sample medians of 100 faecal coliforms per 100 mL, 40 faecal streptococci per 100 mL, 50 coliphages per 100 mL, 0 human viruses per 10 L.

Green DH, Lewis GD. 1999. Comparative detection of enteric viruses in wastewaters, sediments and oysters by reverse transcription-PCR and cell culture. Water Research 33(5): 1195–200.
Reports results from eight occasions over a 12-month period around Auckland’s Mangere treatment plant. Enteroviruses were found up to 276 pfu per L in the final effluent, being highest in winter and spring (four samples were less than detection limit). They were also present in most sediment samples and in three oyster samples. Rotavirus was present in most final effluent and oyster samples, and in one sediment sample. Hepatitis A virus was confirmed in seven sediment samples, but not in any final effluent or oyster samples.

Grimes DJ. 1991. Ecology of estuarine bacteria capable of causing human disease: a review. Estuaries 14(4): 345–60.
Reviews current knowledge concerning A. cinetobacter, Aeromonas, Clostridium, Enterobacter, Flavobacterium, Legionella, Listeria, Pleisiomonas, Pseudomonas and Vibrio.

Grimont F, Grimont PAD, Richard C. 1992. The genus Klebsiella. In: A Balows et al (eds) The Prokaryotes, 2nd ed. Springer-Verlag, New York, 2673–4.
Discusses Klebsiella species as infectious particles.

Grohmann GS, Ashbolt NJ, Genova MS, Logan G, Cox P, Kueh CSW. 1993. Detection of viruses in coastal and river water systems in Sydney, Australia. Water Science and Technology 27(3–4): 457–61.
Isolated enteroviruses, adenoviruses and reoviruses. Data suggest “long-term survival of viruses in sediments and/or contamination from other sources such as storm water discharge”. Since the use of deep ocean outfalls there was a decrease in the number of positive seawater samples close to the beaches, whereas in stormwater drains viral presence remained constant.

Haas CN, Rose JB, Gerba CP. 1999. Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment. Wiley, New York.
Authoritative reference for this new field of risk modelling, and associated techniques.

Haile RW, Alamillo J, Barrett K, Cressey R, Dermond J, Ervin C, Glasser A, Harawa N, Harmon P, Harper J, McGee C, Millikan RC, Nides M, Witte JS. 1996. An Epidemiological Study of Possible Adverse Health Effects of Swimming in Santa Monica Bay. Santa Monica Bay Restoration Project. Final Report, 7 May (summary dated October 1996).
Reports a large-scale epidemiological study of head-immersing bathers aimed at evaluating the possible adverse health effects of urban run-off. Some 11,793 successful follow-up interviews were completed with beach attenders, and daily ankle-depth water samples were analysed for faecal coliforms, enterococci and E. coli. Findings include: (i) an increased risk of illness (about 1%) associated with swimming near flowing storm drain outlets (based on groups swimming at and 400 yards from drains); (ii) an increased risk of illness associated with swimming in areas with high densities of bacterial indicators; (iii) the total coliform to faecal coliform ratio was one of the better indicators for predicting health risk; (iv) illnesses were reported more often on days when samples were positive for enteric viruses.

Hall AJ, Rodrigues LC. 1992. Health risks associated with bathing in sea water. British Medical Journal 302: 572.
A letter to the editor faulting Balarajan et al (1991) for lack of detail on a number of issues (pre-publicity, influence of non-ownership of telephones, forms of immersion, accounting for possible confounders). In reply (same page) the authors clarified aspects of these questions (e.g. explaining how they minimised pre-publicity so as to avoid enhanced self-reporting of symptoms). They noted that their main finding was a “dose-response effect of different forms of contact with sea water: those bathing activities that entailed more immersion usually resulted in more symptoms being reported”.

Harrington JF, Wilcox DN, Giles PS, Ashbolt NJ, Evans JC, Kirton HC. 1993. The health of Sydney surfers: an epidemiological study. Water Science and Technology 27(3–4): 175–81.
Reports a 90-day, six-beach study wherein 2003 recruits returned 4011 questionnaires incorporating 43,175 swimming events. Overall, swimmers reported illness 1.63 times more often than non-swimmers. Relative risks for total illness in males rose from 1.79 in high-frequency beach swimmers, to 2.26 when their swims at non-ocean sites were included. No firm health-based risk threshold was reported.

Henshilwood K, Green J, Lees DN. 1993. Monitoring the marine environment for small round structured viruses (SRSVs): a new approach to combating the transmission of these viruses by molluscan shellfish. Water Science and Technology 38(12): 51–6.
Shellfish were measured every 1–2 weeks over a 14-month period for SRSVs. Concentrations were highest in winter, when oyster-associated gastrointestinal illness is at its peak. Sequence analysis identified 11 SRSV strains. Virus monitoring of shellfish is now possible.

Holmes PR. 1989. Research into health risks at bathing beaches in Hong Kong. Journal of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management 3: 488–95.
Partial presentation of results of the 1987 Hong Kong study (see Cheung et al 1990).

Horwitz MS. 1990. Adenoviruses. In: BN Fields et al (eds) Virology, 2nd ed. Raven Press, New York, 1723–43.
Describes this virus, which can cause significant respiratory illness.

IAWPRC. 1991. Bacteriophages as model viruses in water quality control. In: AH Havelaar (ed) Study Group on Health Related Water Microbiology. Water Research 25: 529–45.
Reviews possible use of F-specific RNA phages and phages of Bacteroides fragilis as virus surrogates. Usefulness of somatic coliphages is compromised by their ability to multiply in freshwater.

Ikram R, Chambers S, Mitchell P, Brieseman MA, Ikram OH. 1994. A case control study to determine risk factors for Campylobacter infection in Christchurch in the summer of 1992–93. New Zealand Medical Journal 107: 430–2.
A study aimed at determining the risk factors for acquiring Campylobacter infection in Christchurch in the 1992/93 summer found eating undercooked chicken away from home is a major factor, but also drinking water from a non-urban supply.

Jones F, Kay D. 1989. Bathing waters and health studies. Water Services 93: 87–9.
Raises questions about the Cabelli studies (between-site range of illness rates, use of telephone survey rather than medical follow-up, lack of control of length of swim, lack of information on alternative modes of infection). Opined that USA results may not be transferable to UK.

Jones F, Kay D, Stanwell-Smith R, Wyer M. 1990. An appraisal of the potential health impacts of sewage disposal to UK coastal waters. Journal of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management 4: 295–303.
Claims that North American epidemiological studies are not scientifically robust, leaving a “research vacuum”, such that UK studies should proceed (pilot controlled cohort studies had been carried out in 1989 at Langland Bay in Wales).

Jones F, Kay D, Stanwell-Smith R, Wyer M. 1991. Results of the first pilot-scale controlled cohort epidemiological investigation into possible health effects of bathing in sea water at Langland Bay, Swansea. Journal of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management 5: 91–8.
Reviews the 1989 controlled-cohort pilot study. Notes that responses to their detailed medical questionnaire resulted in higher reported attack rates of perceived illness for both bathers and non-bathers. Some statistically significant results were reported for perceived illness, which were not confirmed by clinical tests. Concludes full-scale studies are desirable.

Jones N, Graham J. 1995. Outbreak of gastroenteritis associated with oysters: a Norwalk-like virus most likely cause. The New Zealand Public Health Report 2(3): 25–7.
Thirty-six of 95 people attending a Christmas party in December 1994 developed a gastrointestinal illness. Epidemiological and microbiological investigation indicated that oysters contaminated with a Norwalk-like virus were the most likely cause of infection. The oysters were all probably from a Bay of Islands farm.

Kay D. 1988. Coastal bathing water: the application of water quality standards to Welsh beaches. Applied Geography 8: 117–34.
Compares relative utility of European and North American standards to Welsh beach data. Equates faecal coliforms to E. coli.

Kay D, McDonald A. 1986a. Coastal bathing water quality. Journal of Shoreline Management 2: 259–83.
Notes the need for very large samples to identify statistically significant relationships. Criticises the PHLS (1959) and MRC (1959) findings as inferences going far beyond the data gathered (which was for two severe notifiable illnesses).

Kay D, McDonald A. 1986b. The relevance of epidemiological research in the British context. European Water and Sewage 90: 321–8.
Documents the UK shift away from the views expressed by MRC (1959) and PHLS (1959). Notes that statistically significant transmission of minor illnesses could be expected even at beaches that comply with the EEC standards.

Kay D, Wyer M, McDonald A, Woods N. 1990. The application of water-quality standards to UK bathing waters. Journal of the Institute of Water and Environmental Management 4: 436–41.
Analyses data for 425 sampling locations. Ranks EEC, US EPA and Canadian standards for stringency. Equates faecal coliforms to E. coli.

Kay D, Fleisher JM, Jones F, Salmon RL, Wyer MD, Godfree AF, Zelenauch-Jacquotte Z, Shore R. 1994. Predicting the likelihood of gastro-enteritis from sea bathing: results from randomised exposure. Lancet 344: 905–9.
Reports controlled-cohort trials at four UK beaches with 1216 adults, including 548 who entered the water, immersing the head three times. Adverse (gastrointestinal) health effects were identified when faecal streptococci (at chest depth) exceeded 32 per 100 mL (being the median of the highest faecal streptococci band which failed to attain statistical significance). Equation used is Logn odd (of gastroenteritis) = √(FS-32) – 2.3561. Medical follow-up was included. Some 65.7% of gastrointestinal cases had onset dates 7–21 days after exposure. Non-bather gastrointestinal illness rate was 9.7%.

Kay D, Fleisher J, Wyer MD, Salmon RL. 2001. Re-analysis of the seabathing data from the UK randomised trials. A report to DETR, Aberystwyth, University of Wales, Centre for Research into Environment and Health.

Koenraad PMF, Rombouts FM, Notermans SHW. 1997. Epidemiological aspects of thermophilic Campylobacter in water-related environments: a review. Water Environment Research 69(1): 52–63.
Risk analysis indicates that the contribution of contaminated recreational water to human infections may be greater than previously assumed. “The contribution of viable but non-culturable Campylobacter cells in the contamination cycle has been found to be negligible.”

Kueh CS, Tam T-Y, Lee T, Wong SL, Lloyd OL, Yu ITS, Wong TW, Tam JS, Bassett DCJ. 1995. Epidemiological study of swimming-associated illnesses relating to bathing-beach water quality. Water Science and Technology 31(5–6): 1–4.
Reports results from a 1992 study at two beaches with 18,122 swimmers, following on from that in 1987 (Cheung et al 1990). Only swimmer’s gastrointestinal symptoms were found to be associated with pollution level, not with faecal coliforms or E. coli, but with Clostridium perfringens, Aeromonas spp. and Vibrio cholerae (non-O1). The study did not measure faecal streptococci or enterococci.

Lacey RF, Pike EB. 1989. Water recreation and risk. Journal of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management 3: 13–18.
Discusses the role of society in regulating voluntary risks, difficulties of measuring risks via epidemiological studies, questionable predictive power of bacterial indicators, and identifying a satisfactory rationale for standards for recreational waters. Concludes that there is no completely satisfactory way of providing guidance on recreational risk.

Lacey RF, Gunby A, Hay SV. 1995. Methods of Assessing Compliance with Standards for the Quality of Bathing Waters. Final report to the Department of the Environment. Report No. DoE 3837/1, Water Research Centre, Medmenham, Marlow, Bucks, England.
Addresses statistical issues in deciding whether bathing sites conform to the imperative (I) values in EU Directive (which are based on 95% of samples).

Lee JV, Dawson SR, Ward S, Surman SB, Neal KR. 1997. Bacteriophages are a better indicator of illness rates than bacteria amongst users of a white water course fed by a lowland river. Water Science and Technology 35(11–12): 165–70.
Reports results from 473 questionnaires from canoeists and rafters. Logistic regression identified F-specific RNA bacteriophages as the best microbiological parameter associated with the risk of gastrointestinal illness. No pattern was found with other illnesses (including respiratory). Regular users of the course had lower risks of illness. The level of contamination was very high (median enterococci = 102 per 100 mL).

Leeming R, Ball A, Ashbolt N, Nichols P. 1996. Using faecal sterols from humans and animals to distinguish faecal pollution in receiving waters. Water Research 30(12): 2893–900.
Analysed up to seven replicates for faecal samples: hen, seagull, duck, magpie, Rosella, swan, pig, human. Species chosen from those common to both urban and rural catchments. Cats and pigs were the only animals with similar faecal sterol profiles to humans. Sterol fingerprints are sufficiently distinctive to be of diagnostic value in determining the origin of faecal pollution.

Le Guyader F, Miossec L, Haugarreau L, Dubois E, Kopecka H, Pommepuy M. 1998. RT-PCR evaluation of viral contamination in five shellfish beds over a 12-month period. Water Science and Technology 38(12): 45–50.
Five shellfish beds were surveyed for 12 months. Of the 104 samples, 66% contained at least one virus. The two sites regularly contaminated by faecal coliforms had the highest percentage of viruses, but HAV was detected at only one site. Sampling sites meeting the criteria for commercialisation showed occasional viral contamination and viruses were detected in sites with no faecal coliform contamination.

Lewis GD, Loutit MW, Austin FJ. 1985. Human enteroviruses in marine sediments near a sewage outfall on the Otago coast. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 19: 187–92.
Sediment and beach sand samples were collected from around a sewer outfall and tested for presence of enteroviruses and faecal coliforms. Enteroviruses were recovered from five of 14 samples collected on three occasions and were recovered from two samples in which faecal coliforms were low.

Lewis GD, Austin FJ, Loutit MW, Sharples K. 1986. Enterovirus removal from sewage: the effectiveness of four different treatment plants. Water Research 20: 1291–7.
Human enterovirus removal from four sewage plants (oxidation pond, two trickling filters, sedimentation/chlorination) showed insignificant removal through the plants and poor correlation with faecal coliforms, suspended solids, pH or conductivity. More viruses were present in summer. Maximum concentration was 2570 pfu per L.

Lewis GD, Loutit MW, Austin FJ. 1986. Enteroviruses in mussels and marine sediments and deputation of naturally accumulated viruses by green-lipped mussels (Perna canaliculus). New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 20: 431–7.
A 16-month survey assessing the distribution of human enteroviruses in sediments and mussels near two sewage outfalls on the North Taranaki coast. Enteroviruses were present in high numbers near the New Plymouth outfall (maximum 32,000 pfu (100 g)–1 of wet mussel tissue and 59 pfu (100 g)–1 of wet sediment material). Viruses were recovered occasionally from sediments and mussels near the Waitara Borough outfall. Attempts to depurate the New Plymouth mussels over eight days were unsuccessful.

Lewis GD. 1995. F-specific bacteriophage as an indicator of human viruses in natural waters and sewage effluents in northern New Zealand. Water Science and Technology 31(5–6): 231–4.
While F-phage matched pathogen behaviour in several respects, its low abundance in marine waters, uncertainty as to source and detection irregularities pose problems for its use as an indicator.

Lightfoot NE. 1989. A prospective study of swimming related illness at six freshwater beaches in Southern Ontario. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Toronto.
A Cabelli-type study, but “highly credible” gastrointestinal illness was not included in the analysis (the author disagreed with the inclusion of fever in its definition). It was concluded that there was “no evidence to suggest that bacterial count contributed to the prediction of illness in swimmers” (abstract) and that “only tenuous correlations exist, at best” (p. 141). A logistic regression model was fitted to the data, finding that interviewer and contact person were significant confounders.

Liston J. 1994. Association of Vibrionaceae, natural toxins and parasites with fecal indicators. In: CR Hackney and MD Pearson (eds) Environmental Indicators and Shellfish Safety. Chapman & Hall, New York.
Notes strong evidence for vibrios being indigenous to estuaries. No useful correlation between vibrios or Plesiomonas and faecal indicators has been found for shellfish. Natural toxins are, and should be, completely independent of testing for faecal contamination. Association between parasites (Giardia and Cryptosporidium) is “moot until there is substantial evidence of actual parasite infection by one of these organisms or any other (e.g. Entamoeba histolytica) parasite where the vehicle is molluscan shellfish”.

Loutit M. 1985. The fate of certain bacteria and heavy metals in sewage discharged through an ocean outfall. Proceedings of the Australasian Conference on Coastal and Ocean Engineering, Vol. 1, Christchurch, December, pp. 211–19. Sponsored by Institution of Engineers, Australia, Institution of Professional Engineers, New Zealand, National Water and Soil Conservation Organisation.
Bacteria could be detected in sediments up to 8 km from Dunedin’s Lawyer’s Head outfall. On occasion E. coli could be detected in the sediments but not in the water.

Mariño FJ, Moiñigo MA, Martinez-Manzanares E, Borrego JJ. 1995a. Microbiological epidemiological study of selected marine beaches in Malaga (Spain). Water Science and Technology 31(5–6): 5–9.
Reports a three-year study at two beaches. Skin infections were found to be associated with levels of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Candida albicans and Aeromonas hydrophilia. The study had very small numbers of non-exposed individuals, making the attainment of statistical significance difficult.

Mariño FJ, Moiñigo MA, Martinez-Manzanares E, Borrego JJ. 1995b. Application of the recreational water quality standard guidelines. Water Science and Technology 31(5–6): 27–31.
Examines applicability of WHO/UNEP and EC bathing water directive using data from their epidemiological study. Concludes the best indicators are faecal coliforms, E. coli and coliphages (at low pollution level) and faecal streptococci and coliphages (at high pollution level).

McBride GB. 1990. Background Notes for the Development of Guidelines for Microbiological Receiving Water Standards for New Zealand. Water Quality Centre Publication No. 18. DSIR, Hamilton. Report available from the librarian, NIWA, Hamilton.
Documents historical development of microbiological standards for New Zealand, and issues to be addressed in the forthcoming Resource Management Act’s implementation.

McBride GB. 1993. Discussion of ‘Health effects of swimmers and nonpoint sources of contaminated water’, by Calderon et al. International Journal of Environmental Health Research 3: 115–16.
Disagrees with the claim by Calderon et al (1991) that there was “no association” between swimmers’ health risk and the concentration of animal faecal material. Notes that reported rates appear to be in fact rather high.

McBride GB, Bandaranayake DR, Salmond CE, Turner SJ, Lewis GD, Till D, Hatton C, Cooper AB. 1993. Faecal indicator density and illness risk to swimmers in coastal waters: a preliminary study for New Zealand. Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the New Zealand Water and Wastes Association, Havelock North, 1–3 September 1993.
Reports results of preliminary trials (1992/93) carried out at Auckland beaches only. Enterococci emerged as a statistically significant indicator for HCGI (highly credible gastrointestinal illness). Sample size was too small to reach firm conclusions about how this might have related to pollution levels. Minor corrections (hand-annotated on the original) have been made in the version of this paper appearing in Bandaranayake et al 1993.

McBride GB, Loftis JC, Adkins NC. 1993. What do significance tests really tell us about the environment? Environmental Management 17(4): 423–32. Errata in 18: 317.
Notes that an individual p-value may not be instructive about patterns and associations in the environment, particularly because one seldom has confidence that a null hypothesis could in fact be true.

McBride GB, Salmond CE, Bandaranayake DR, Turner SJ, Lewis GD, Till DG. 1998. Health effects of marine bathing in New Zealand. International Journal of Environmental Health Research 8: 173–89.
Reports New Zealand national prospective study performed at seven beaches in the 1995 summer using 1577 beach-users who entered the water, and 2307 who did not. On each of the 107 interview days multiple samples of the beach water were examined for three faecal indicators (faecal coliforms, E. coli, enterococci). Log-linear modelling showed that enterococci was most strongly and consistently associated with illness risk for the exposed groups, particularly for respiratory illness among paddlers and long-duration swimmers. Crude risk differences for these two groups were 7 and 33 per 1000 individuals, rising to 62 and 87 per 1000 individuals for the highest enterococci quartile. No substantial differences in illness risks were found between the human and animal waste impacted beaches, though both were markedly different from the control beaches.

McBride GB, Thorn C, Salmond C. 1996. Feasibility of Bathing-health Effects Study for New Zealand Freshwaters. Ministry for the Environment Report No. 202.
Examines patterns of freshwater recreation at lower North Island sites. Concluded that an epidemiological study was feasible only if of the controlled type.

McBride GB, Till DG, Salmond CE. 1998. National study of health effects of marine bathing and implications for new guidelines. Proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference and Expo of the New Zealand Water & Wastes Association, Museum of New Zealand, Wellington, 23–25 September, 251–5.
Implications of the national study (McBride, Salmond et al 1998) for the review of microbiological water quality guidelines are discussed, particularly in terms of the ‘single-sample maxima’ and sampling depth.

McBride G, Till D, Ryan T, Ball A, Lewis G, Palmer S, Weinstein P. 2002. Freshwater Microbiological Research Programme: Pathogen Occurrence and Human Health Risk Assessment Analysis. Ministry for the Environment.
A study of New Zealand freshwater recreational sites. The main outcomes were that: (i) Campylobacter and human adenoviruses are the pathogens most likely to cause human waterborne illness; (ii) an estimated 4% of notified campylobacteriosis in New Zealand could be attributable to water contact recreation; (iii) E. coli as an indicator of increased Campylobacter infection is in the range of 200–500 E. coli per 100 mL; (iv) other pathogens examined could not be related to E. coli concentrations in fresh waters; (v) pathogens are more likely to be present and in greater numbers in turbid waters. The report can be downloaded from www.mfe.govt.nz.

Medema GJ, Asperen IA van, Havelaar AH. 1997. Assessment of the exposure of swimmers to microbiological contaminants in fresh waters. Water Science and Technology 35(11–12): 157–63.
Reports on a follow-up study using 1,313 participants in seven triathlons in 1993/94. All sites were influenced by sewage effluents and most by agricultural run-off. The risk of gastrointestinal infection correlated well with concentration of thermotolerant coliforms and E. coli, but not with other variables (faecal enterococci, Staphylococcus aureus, F-specific RNA phages, enteroviruses , thermophilic Campylobacter, Salmonella, Aeromonas, Pleisiomonas shigelloides, Pseudomonas aeruginosa). Note that the abstract says more than the paper on epidemiological parts, but an accompanying poster paper reported illness results from 827 of the triathletes, with 773 non-swimming controls (in a run-bike-run event). Thresholds of 220 cfp per 100 mL (thermotolerant coliforms) and 355 cfp per 100 mL (E. coli) were reported.

Medema GJ, Asperen IA van, Klokman-Houweling JM, Nooitgedagt A, de Laar MJW van, Havelaar AH. 1995. The relationship between health effects in triathletes and microbiological quality of freshwater. Water Science and Technology 31(5–6): 19–26.
Reports on a follow-up pilot study of 314 triathletes and 81 run-bike-run controls. The triathletes showed elevated illness rates, indicating that a full study is feasible. Geometric mean E. coli and enterococci were 170 and 13 per 100 mL, respectively.

Medema GJ, Teunis PFM, Havelaar AH, Haas CN. 1996. Assessment of dose-response relationship of Campylobacter jejuni. International Journal of Food Microbiology 30: 101–11.
Reports the best-fit beta-Poisson dose response model for a common strain of Campylobacter jejuni (Penner serotype 27).

Melnick JL. 1990. Enteroviruses: polioviruses, coxsackieviruses, echoviruses, and newer enteroviruses. In: BN Fields et al (eds) Virology, 2nd ed. Raven Press, New York, 549–606.
Good review of virology.

Miles MA. 1973. An investigation into the possible relationship between bathing and ear complaints in Taupo. New Zealand Sanitarian 28(2): 75.
Propose that further examination be made into ear complaints among swimmers at Taupo.

Ministry for the Environment. 1992. ME91. Water Quality Guidelines No. 1. Ministry for the Environment, Wellington.
Guidelines for the control of undesirable biological growths in water.

Ministry for the Environment. 1994. ME142. Water Quality Guidelines No. 2. Ministry for the Environment, Wellington.
Guidelines for management of water colour and clarity.

Ministry for the Environment. 1996. Feasibility of Bathing-health Effects Study for New Zealand Freshwaters. Prepared by GB McBride, C Thorn and C Salmond. Ministry for the Environment, Wellington.
Considers possibilities for freshwater epidemiological study of swimmers’ health risk, and concludes that only a controlled-cohort design is likely to be fruitful. Includes a survey of the degree of recreational use of freshwaters at sites in Hawke’s Bay, Wairarapa and Manawatu. Implies that hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders swim at freshwater sites annually, but in a very dispersed manner (there are seldom more than 100 people at a ‘site’).

Ministry for the Environment. 1999. Environmental Education: A guide for programme providers – how to develop, implement and evaluate strategies and programmes. Ministry for the Environment, Wellington.
A guide to assist with preparing and implementing effective environmental education programmes, tailored to meet the needs of individual organisations.

Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. 1995. Shellfish Quality Assurance Circular. Ministry of Agriculture, Wellington.

Moore B. 1975. The case against microbial standards for bathing beaches. In: ALH Gameson (ed) Discharge of Sewage from Sea Outfalls. Pergamon Press, Oxford and New York, 103–9.
Argues against standards, noting that a health-effects versus indicator relationship had not yet been developed, and that total or faecal coliforms are not appropriate.

Moore B. 1977. The EEC bathing water directive. Marine Pollution Bulletin 8: 269–72.
Expresses dissatisfaction with the 1976 EEC Directive (EU 1976), with concern about competition for public funds. Notes the effect of the Directive is to give high priority to “epidemiological studies that will provide a quantitative dimension to the postulated health risks of bathing in sewage contaminated seawater”.

Moriñgo MA, Wheeler D, Berry C, Jones C, Muñoz MA, Cornax R, Borrego JJ. 1992. Evaluation of different bacteriophage groups as faecal indicators in contaminated natural waters in southern England. Water Research 26(3): 267–71.
River and seawater affected by faecal discharges were analysed to evaluate the reliability of coliphages and F-specific RNA bacteriophages as indicators of the microbiological quality of waters. FRNA phages showed no direct relationship with levels of faecal pollution and were never detected in samples with few enteroviruses, whereas coliphages were detected. Coliphages could be considered an optimal indicator.

Morris R. 1991. The EC bathing water virological standard: is it realistic? Water Science and Technology 24(2): 49–52.
Notes that only culturable enteroviruses and rotaviruses have available enumeration methods, and that sampling frequency is generally not sufficient to give effect to the requirement that 95% of samples be free of enteroviruses. Nevertheless concludes that the present imperative standard should remain.

MRC. 1959. Sewage Contamination of Bathing Beaches in England and Wales. Medical Research Council Memorandum (UK) No. 37.
Interpreted the PHLS (1959) study results as: “With the exception of a few aesthetically revolting beaches around the coast of England and Wales, the risk to health of bathing in sewage-contaminated sea-water can, for all practical purposes, be ignored.”

Mujeriego R, Bravo JM, Feliu MT. 1982. Recreation in coastal waters: public health implications. Vier Journée Études Pollutions. Cannes, Centre Internationale d’Exploration Scientifique de la Mer (CIESM): 585–94.
Reports on a follow-up epidemiological study of 24 beaches at Málaga and Tarragona, using 20,219 responses. Ailments found were skin infections (2%), ear and eye infections (1.5%) and intestinal infection (< 1%). According to Shuval (1986) the study does supply “some suggestive evidence as to the value of enterococci as an indicator of marine pollution”, but suffers from a lack of controls and appropriate water quality data.

New Jersey Department of Health. 1989. Ocean Health Study: A study of the relationship between illness and ocean beach water quality in New Jersey.
A 1988 prospective study using 16,089 (10% under age 10) at nine coastal and two lake beaches impacted by chlorinated effluents. Swimmers consistently reported higher symptom rates than non-swimmers (excess of 12.2 cases per 1000). Water quality was very good and attempts to relate the excess illness rates with pollution levels failed.

NTAC. 1968. Water Quality Criteria. Report of the National Technical Advisory Committee to the Federal Water Pollution Control Administration.
The first federal compilation of quality ‘criteria’, sometimes called the “Green Book”. It was compiled by five separate committees, which each recommended different definitions of how one would judge compliance.

Nuzzi R, Burhans R. 1997. The use of enterococcus and coliform in characterising bathing-beach waters. Environmental Health (July/August): 16–21.
Reports water quality studies at New York beaches for total and faecal coliforms (still used in New York for bathing waters) and enterococci. Found that enterococcus correlated well with both sets of coliforms, but would result in more beach closures.

Philip R. 1991. Risk Assessment and Microbiological Hazards Associated with Recreational Water Sports. Reviews in Medical Microbiology 2: 208–14.

PHLS. 1959. Sewage contamination of coastal bathing waters in England and Wales: a bacteriological and epidemiological study. Journal of Hygiene (Cambridge) 57: 435–72.
Reports on a retrospective study of enteric fever and poliomyelitis (both notifiable). Concludes “that bathing in sewage polluted sea water carries only a negligible risk to health, even on beaches that are aesthetically very unsatisfactory ...”. This is sometimes quoted as Moore (1959); Dr Brendan Moore was the main author.

Pike EB. 1993. Recreational use of coastal waters: development of health-related standards. Journal of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management: 163–69.
Compares USA/UK/EU approaches to setting standards, noting that all are primarily directed at bathing. Statistical issues in defining central and extreme values of indicator variables are discussed, in particular the use of single sample maxima is problematical. Notes that only the USEPA criteria had been developed from epidemiological studies (up to 1993).

Pike EB. 1994. Health effects of sea bathing (WMI 9021) – Phase III. Final Report to the Department of the Environment. Report No. DoE 3412/2, Water Research Centre, Medmenham, England. Available from Water Research Centre.
Summarises results from the two sets of UK studies in the early 1990s. These were on 16,569 holidaymakers at 10 beaches using an uncontrolled prospective cohort design, and on 1112 healthy adult volunteers at four beaches, using a controlled cohort design. Holidaymakers entering the sea perceived all symptoms more frequently than those who did not, the relative increases being related to degree of water contact and age, being greatest in surfers and in 15–24-year-olds. Relative increases in frequencies of eye, ear nose and throat, respiratory and skin symptoms were not strongly related to microbiological water quality. Relative increases in diarrhoea in those entering the water were related to total coliform counts and enteroviruses. In the volunteer study, the incidence in bathers of symptoms suggesting gastroenteritis was related to counts of faecal streptococci at chest depth. No relationship was evident between self-recording of symptoms and results of clinical examinations. Overall conclusions from both types of study are in agreement with the results of earlier studies.

Prüss A. 1998. Review of epidemiological studies on health effects from exposure to recreational water. International Journal of Epidemiology 27: 1–9.
Reviews 22 epidemiological studies conducted for freshwater and coastal water. Most reported a dose-related increase of health risk in swimmers with an increase in indicator bacteria count in recreational waters. Relative risks for swimmers versus non-swimmers are typically in the range 1.0 to 3.0. Enterococci and faecal streptococci were opined to be the best indicators for seawater and E. coli for freshwater. Reviews Bradford Hill’s nine criteria for causation in environmental studies, as applied to gastrointestinal symptoms. Passes seven of them: strength of association (yes), consistency (yes), specificity of association (no), temporality (yes), biological gradient (yes), plausibility (yes), coherence (yes), experiment (no), analogy (yes).

Robertson WJ. 1993. Guidelines for the protection of human health on bathing beaches. Journal of the Canadian Institute of Public Health Inspectors (Spring): 14–17.
Reviews national recreational water data and proposes that E. coli and the enterococcus group are currently the best available indicators for fresh and marine waters respectively. Proposed limits similar to those of USEPA 1986a.

Robson WLM, Leung AKC. 1990. Swimming and ear infection. Journal of the Royal Society of Health 199–200.
Reviews the association of ear infection with swimming. Chlorinated water or stagnant ponds may pose a risk for otitis media or otitis externa.

Rosenberg ML, Hazlet KK, Schaefer J, Wells JG, Pruneda RC. 1976. Shigellosis from swimming. Journal of the American Medical Association 236(16): 1849–52.
In August 1974, 31 of 45 cases of Shigella sonnei infection in Dubuque (Iowa) were traced to swimming in the Mississippi River (in an eight-mile stretch). Significant associations between illness and swimming were also reported by a retrospective survey of 60 families who had camped at a park beside the river. The attack rate for swimmers was 18%. Mean faecal coliform content was 17,500 per 100 mL.

Salas HJ. 1986. History and application of microbiological water quality standards in the marine environment. Water Science & Technology 18: 47–57.
Reviews many countries standards up to the mid-1980s. Proposes that standards are best expressed as an average concentration, and a ‘maximum value’ that is not to be exceeded for more than a high percentage of the time (e.g. 90%).

Seyfried PL, Tobin RS, Brown NE, Ness PF. 1985a. A prospective study of swimming-related illness. I. Swimming-associated health risk. American Journal of Public Health 75(9): 1068–70.
Reports on a 1980 prospective study on 10 Ontario river and lake beaches (see EHD 1980), using 4537 interviews. Crude morbidity rates were 69.6 per 1000 swimmers and 29.5 per 1000 non-swimmers. Swimmers experienced respiratory ailments most frequently, followed by gastrointestinal, eye, ear, skin and allergenic symptoms.

Seyfried PL, Tobin RS, Brown NE, Ness PF. 1985b. A prospective study of swimming-related illness. II. Morbidity and the microbiological quality of water. American Journal of Public Health 75(9): 1071–6.
Reports results for faecal coliforms, faecal streptococci, heterotrophic bacteria, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and total staphylococci. Logistic modelling showed morbidity among swimmers to be related to staphylococcal counts, faecal coliforms and, less strongly, to faecal streptococci.

Shuval HI. 1986. Thalassogenic diseases. UNEP Regional Seas Reports and Studies No. 79, UNEP.
(Greek: thalass = sea, genesis = source.) Comprehensive review of many studies. Concludes that after years of debate there is now firm evidence that bathing in sewage-polluted waters causes an excess of gastrointestinal disease, the rates of which correlate generally with enterococci or E. coli concentrations.

Simmonds RS, Loutit MW, Austin FJ. 1983. Enteric viruses in New Zealand wastewaters. New Zealand Journal of Science 26: 437–41.
Forty-seven samples from three treatment plants were tested for human enteroviruses. Nine different viruses were detected in 36 samples ranging up to 4000 pfu/L. Chlorine reduced numbers, but they were still detectable in 11 of 16 chlorinated samples.

Sinton LW, Davies-Colley RJ, Bell RG. 1994. Inactivation of enterococci and fecal coliforms from sewage and meatworks effluents in seawater chambers. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 60: 2040–8.
Inactivation of faecal coliforms (FC) and enterococci (Ent) from sewage and meatworks effluents was measured in experiments (meatworks FC > sewage FC > meatworks Ent > sewage Ent). Decay coefficient (1st-order) for FC was two to four times that for Ent, and was slower at lower temperatures. Factors other than insolation were implicated (by between-experiment variations). Most inactivation appeared to be in the 318–340 nm and > 400 nm ranges.

Sinton LW, Donnison AM, Hastie CM. 1993a. Faecal streptococci as faecal pollution indicators: a review. Part I: Taxonomy and enumeration. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 27: 101–15.
Notes that there is no universally accepted method for isolating faecal streptococci.

Sinton LW, Donnison AM, Hastie CM. 1993b. Faecal streptococci as faecal pollution indicators: a review. Part II: Sanitary significance, survival, and use. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 27: 117–37.
Faecal streptococci (or the subset enterococci) are more resistant to sunlight-induced inactivation than faecal coliforms. Notes adoption of USEPA criteria, using enterococci for marine and freshwaters (and E. coli for freshwaters) should be adopted with caution in New Zealand. Also notes the general failure of the faecal streptococci:faecal coliform ratio as a measure of human:animal contributions to a faecal load.

Sinton LW, Finlay RK, Hannah DJ. 1998. Distinguishing human from animal faecal contamination: a review. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 32: 323–48.
Notes that reliable evidence is lacking on the relative health risks posed by exposure to either human or animal faeces. Notes that New Zealand’s high grazing animal:human ratio makes “it seem prudent to assume that human and animal faecal pollution both constitute a risk to human health”. Reviews methods for distinguishing animal and human faecal residues, noting that DNA-based techniques (e.g. PCR) may assist.

Sinton LW, Finlay RK, Lynch PA. 1999. Sunlight inactivation of fecal bacteriophages and bacteria in sewage-polluted seawater. Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
Sunlight inactivation in seawater water of faecal indicators from sewage was measured in outdoor experiments over a two-year period. The ranking (from the greatest to least inactivation) was faecal coliforms > F-RNA phages > somatic coliphages. These results suggest that, in seawater, somatic coliphages are likely to be the best enteric virus indicators. This inactivation ranking was also evident in a two-day experiment, which included enterococci. Although enterococci were initially more sunlight resistant than faecal coliforms, the two indicators fell to counts of < 1/100 mL at around the same time on day two.

Sinton LW, Hall CH, Lynch PA, Davies-Colley RJ. 2002. Sunlight inactivation of fecal indicator bacteria and bacteriophages from waste stabilization pond effluent in fresh and saline water. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 68: 3.
An important paper on the topic of receiving waters affected by pond discharges. Experiments demonstrate that enterococci survive longer than faecal coliforms in freshwater / raw sewage mixtures, but the opposite pattern was observed for pond effluents. Enterococci appear to suffer photo-oxidative damage in ponds, rendering them susceptible to further such damage after discharge, suggesting that they are unsuitable as indicators of pond effluents to natural waters.

Sorvillo FJ, Fujioka F, Nahlen B, Tormey P, Kebebjian RS, Mascola L. 1992. Swimming-associated Cryptosporidiosis. American Journal of Public Health 82(5): 742–44.
An example of a swimming-pool outbreak of this disease.

Stehr-Green JK, Nicholls C, McEwan S, Payne A, Mitchell P. 1991. Waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Christchurch: the importance of a combined epidemiologic and microbiologic investigation. New Zealand Medical Journal 104: 356–8.
Two cases at a camp and convention centre near Christchurch had water supply strongly suggested as the source of infection.

Stevenson AH. 1953. Studies of bathing water quality and health. American Journal of Public Health 43: 529–38.
Reports findings from US Public Health Service studies in 1948–50 at freshwater sites on lake Michigan at Chicago, the Ohio River at Dayton Ohio (and Tacoma Park pool at Dayton), and New York tidal waters (New Rochelle and Mamaroneck). Used prospective study with 22,164 persons. ‘Swimming’ didn’t require head immersion. Found illness in swimmers was appreciably higher than in non-swimmers. Also found two statistically significant results for illness related to degree of pollution (assessed using total coliforms), between low and high contamination days at one of the Chicago beaches and between the Ohio swimmers.

Streeter HW. 1951. Bacterial Quality Objectives for the Ohio River: A guide for the evaluation of sanitary conditions of waters used for potable supplies and recreational uses. Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission, Cincinnati, OH.
Presents calculations on the risk of contracting typhoid fever for someone who bathes every day for 90 days in water containing 1000 total coliforms per 100 mL. This gave a risk of 1:950, or 1:50 for “diarrhea-enteritis”. This result was used in early standards (Waters Pollution Regulations 1963).

Telford SR. 1996. Annotation: marine waters and non-enteric illness: matching the degree of analytical rigour to the biology of the infection process. American Journal of Public Health 86(9): 1203–04.
A comment on the article by Fleisher and others appearing in the same issue. Notes that their paper represents a “vast methodological improvement over previous studies”, particularly that of Stevenson (1953). Notes that causation studies are now desirable.

Teunis PFM, Havelaar AH. 2000. The beta Poisson dose-response model is not a single-hit model. Risk Analysis 20(4): 513–20.
Cogent account of the validity of a standard dose response model at low doses, and methods for accounting for uncertainty in that model (via Bayesian posterior intervals).

Teunis PFM, Nagelkerke NJD, Haas CN 1999. Dose response models for infectious gastroenteritis. Risk Analysis 19(6): 1251–60.
Identifies some difficulties in modelling the probability of illness given infection for a range of doses – much less straightforward than modelling infection given dose.

Teunis PFM, van der Heijden OG, van der Giessen JWB, Havelaar AH. 1996. The Dose-response Relation in Human Volunteers for Gastro-intestinal Pathogens. RIVM Report No. 284 550 002. Antonie van Leeuwenhoeklaan 9, PO Box 1, NL-3720 BA Bilthoven, The Netherlands.
In-depth review of the available data on clinical trials for a range of gastro-intestinal pathogens. Identifies the most satisfactory models (exponential or beta-Poisson) for each case.

Turner SJ, Lewis GD. 1995. Comparison of F-specific bacteriophage, enterococci, and faecal coliform densities through a wastewater treatment plant employing oxidation ponds. Water Science and Technology 31(5–6): 85–9.
A 12-month study suggests that enterococci may be the best indicator for oxidation pond systems. Did not include E. coli.

Turner SJ, Lewis GD, Bellamy AR. 1997. Detection of sewage-derived Escherichia coli in a rural stream using multiplex PCR and automated DNA detection. Water Science and Technology 35(11–12): 85–9.
A DNA marker shows promise in identifying E. coli isolates of human origin. Field trials upstream and downstream of sewage ponds appear to confirm this.

Tyler KL, Fields BN. 1990. Pathogenesis of viral infections. In: BN Fields et al (eds) Virology, 2nd ed. Raven Press, New York, 191–240.
Includes discussion of inhalation of aerosols as a means of acquiring infectious viral disease.

Tyrrell SA, Rippey SR, Watkins WD. 1995. Inactivation of bacterial and viral indicators in secondary sewage effluents, using chlorine and ozone. Water Science and Technology 29(11): 2483–90.
Chlorine reduced faecal coliforms and enterococci > 100-fold, but for bacteriophages < 10-fold. In contrast, ozonation gave > 100-fold reduction of the phages, but not so much for vegetative bacteria. Concludes faecal coliforms are inadequate for predicting viral response to chlorine or ozone.

USEPA. 1985. Test Methods forEscherichia coliandEnterococciin Water by the Membrane Filtration Procedure. Report EPA 600/4-85-076. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH.
Details the test methods to be used at that time when applying the EPA guidelines to recreational waters.

USEPA. 1986a. Ambient Water Quality for Bacteria 1986. Report EPA 440/5-84-002. USEPA Office of Water Regulations and Standards, Washington, DC 20460.
Gives explanatory material about the derivation of the criteria, using the results of Cabelli (1983a) and Dufour (1984).

USEPA. 1986b. Quality Criteria for Water 1986: Bacteria. Report EPA 440/5-86-001. USEPA Office of Water Regulations and Standards, Washington, DC 20460.
Promulgates “criteria” (i.e. recommended state standards) based on the work of Cabelli (1983a) and Dufour (1984).

USEPA. Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Waste Water. 20th ed, American Public Health Association.

Von Schirnding YER, Kfir R, Cabelli VJ, Franklin L, Joubert G. 1992. Morbidity among bathers exposed to polluted seawater. South African Medical Journal 81(6): 543–6.
Reports on the first phase of a 1990/91 prospective follow-up study at two beaches in Cape Town, using 733 people. Found an excess of gastrointestinal, respiratory and skin symptoms among swimmers, relative to non-swimmers. Results were suggestive of a relationship between swimmers’ illness and water quality.

Von Schirnding YER, Strauss N, Robertson P, Kfir R, Fattal B, Mathee A, Franck M, Cabelli VJ. 1993. Bather morbidity from recreational exposure to sea water. Water Science and Technology 27(3–4): 183–6.
Reports on the full study carried out at two Cape Town beaches in the early 1990s, using 5551 people. Symptom rates for gastrointestinal, respiratory and skin effects were substantially higher at the polluted beach, although they did not reach statistical significance. Does not use the more advanced statistical methods.

Ward RC, Loftis JC, McBride GB. 1990. Design of Water Quality Monitoring Systems. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
Documents important features of design. Includes case studies.

Ware JH. 1990. The role of epidemiology in the assessment of societal risk: a statistician’s perspective. Chance: New Directions for Statistics and Computing: 41–7.
Tracks the development of new statistical methods for design and analysis of chronic diseases. Argues that, in spite of inherent uncertainties, epidemiology plays an essential role in risk assessment.

Wheeler D, Alexander LM. 1992. Assessing the health risks of sea bathing. Journal of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management 6: 459–67 (with discussion).
Reviews the UK-controlled cohort and uncontrolled cohort studies. Questions the effect of necessary pre-publicity of possible self-reporting of health effects in healthy-adult controlled-cohort trials. Concludes that using “captive volunteer” populations of healthy adults has technical merit, but that “there is no epidemiologically defensible way of linking the output of such methods to the results of more conventional techniques for assessing risks in marine waters”. Notes that the Langland Bay pilot controlled cohort study volunteers’ rate of self-reporting of symptoms was very high and correlated poorly with clinical examinations.

WHO. 1986. Correlation between Coastal Water Quality and Health Effects. Report ICP/CEH OO1 m06. World Health Organization, Copenhagen.
Reviews known information, and proposes protocol for carrying out prospective epidemiological studies (with input from Prof. Cabelli, and Drs Fattal and Geldreich). Updated in (uncited) documents ICP/CEH 083/10 (1989) and EUR/ICP/CEH/103(S) (1991).

WHO. 1998. Guidelines for Safe Recreational-water Environments: Coastal and fresh-waters. Draft. Report EOS/DRAFT/98.14. World Health Organization, Geneva.
Proposes 95 percentile guideline values for faecal streptococci (per 100 mL): 10 – NOAEL (No Observed Adverse Effect Level); 50 – LOAEL (Lowest Observed Adverse Effect Level); 200 – value is above threshold and LOAEL in most studies; 1000 – derived from limited evidence concerning typhoid fever.

WHO. 1999. Health-Based Monitoring of Recreational Waters: The feasibility of a new approach (The ‘Annapolis Protocol’). World Health Organization, Geneva.

WHO. 2001. Bathing Water Quality and Human Health: Protection of the human environment water, sanitation and health. Report WHO/SDE/WSH/01.2. World Health Organization, Geneva.
Details of the application of the Annapolis Approach. Percentile values of enterococci for risk based on exposure conditions.

WHO. 2003. Guidelines for Safe Recreational Water Environments: Volume 1 Coastal and Freshwaters. World Health Organization, Geneva.
Provides a review and assessment of the health hazards encountered during recreational use of coastal and freshwater environments. A wide range of hazards are addressed, including water quality.

Wilkinson J, Jenkins A, Wyer M, Kay D. 1995. Modelling faecal coliform dynamics in streams and rivers. Water Research 29(3): 847–55.
Field experiments and modelling have been used to account for sediment entrainment and release of bacteria, as governed by stream flow.

Wittman RJ, Flick GJ. 1995. Microbial contamination of shellfish: prevalence, risk to human health, and control strategies. Annual Review of Public Health 16: 123–40.
In the US the largest number of disease cases are of unknown aetiology. The greatest percentage of known death (95%) is caused by non-cholera vibrio. People with underlying health conditions are the group most at risk.

Wyer MD, Fleisher JM, Gough J, Kay D, Merrett H. 1995. An investigation into parametric relationships between enterovirus and faecal indicator organisms in the coastal waters of England and Wales. Water Research 29(8): 1863–8.
Examined a large combined dataset. The amount of variance in enterovirus concentration explained by bacterial concentrations was only 15–16%.

Wyer MD, Kay D, Fleisher JM, Salmon RL, Jones F, Godfree AF, Jackson G, Rogers A. 1999. An experimental health-related classification for marine waters. Water Research 33(3): 715–22.
Proposes a health-related bathing water standard system (based on gastrointestinal illness avoidance) using faecal streptococci in units per 100 mL. Water quality is: ‘good’ if more than 50% of the FS distribution above 32 is below 73; ‘moderate’ if more than 50% of the FS distribution above 32 is above 73; ‘poor’ if more than 50% of the FS distribution above 32 is above 137; ‘very poor’ if more than 75% of the FS distribution above 32 is above 137.

About the Ministry for the Environment

The Ministry for the Environment works with others to identify New Zealand’s environmental problems and get action on solutions. Our focus is on the effects people’s everyday activities have on the environment, so our work programmes cover both the natural world and the places where people live and work.

We advise the Government on New Zealand’s environmental laws, policies, standards and guidelines, monitor how they are working in practice, and take any action needed to improve them. Through reporting on the state of our environment, we help raise community awareness and provide the information needed by decision makers. We also play our part in international action on global environmental issues.

On behalf of the Minister for the Environment, who has duties under various laws, we report on local government performance on environmental matters and on the work of the Environmental Risk Management Authority and the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority.

Besides the Environment Act 1986 under which it was set up, the Ministry is responsible for administering the Soil Conservation and Rivers Control Act 1941, the Resource Management Act 1991, the Ozone Layer Protection Act 1996, and the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act 1996.