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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 1998, p. 4460-4466, Vol. 64, No. 11
Microbiological Laboratory of Health
Protection, National Institute of Public Health and the
Environment, Bilthoven, The Netherlands
Received 6 April 1998/Accepted 7 August 1998
Experimental analysis of the sedimentation velocity of
Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts and Giardia
lamblia cysts was compared with mathematical description of their
sedimentation velocities by using measurements of (oo)cyst size and
density and the density and viscosity of the sedimentation medium to
determine if the sedimentation kinetics of freely suspended oocysts of
C. parvum and cysts of G. lamblia can be
described by Stokes' law. The theoretically calculated sedimentation
kinetics showed a good agreement with the experimentally observed
kinetics. Both showed a decline in sedimentation velocity over time,
caused primarily by variation in (oo)cyst density. The initial apparent
sedimentation velocities in Hanks balanced salt solution at 23°C was
0.35 µm · s
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
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Sedimentation of Free and Attached
Cryptosporidium Oocysts and Giardia Cysts
in Water
1 for oocysts and 1.4 µm · s
1 for cysts. (Oo)cysts that enter the surface water
environment by discharges of biologically treated sewage may be
attached to sewage particles, and this will affect their sedimentation
kinetics. Therefore, (oo)cysts were mixed with settled secondary
effluent. (Oo)cysts readily attached to the (biological) particles in
effluent; 30% of both cysts and oocysts attached during the first
minutes of mixing, and this fraction increased to approximately 75%
after 24 h. The sedimentation velocity of (oo)cysts attached to
secondary effluent particles increased with particle size and was
(already in the smallest size fraction [1 to 40 µm]) determined by
the sedimentation kinetics of the effluent particles. The observed sedimentation velocities of freely suspended (oo)cysts are probably too
low to cause significant sedimentation in surface water or reservoirs.
However, since a significant proportion of both cysts and oocysts
attached readily to organic biological particles in secondary effluent,
sedimentation of attached (oo)cysts after discharge into surface water
will probably be a significant factor in the environmental ecology of
C. parvum and G. lamblia. Attachment to
particles influences not only sedimentation of (oo)cysts in surface
water but also their behavior in drinking water treatment processes.
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Department of
Chemistry and Biology, Kiwa Research and Consultancy, P.O. Box 1072, 3430 BB Nieuwegein, The Netherlands. Phone: 31 30 6069653. Fax: 31 30 6061165. E-mail: medema{at}kiwaoa.nl.
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