Detalhes do Documento

Mycosands: Fungal diversity and abundance in beach sand and recreational waters - Relevance to human health

Autor(es): Brandão, J. ; Gangneux, J.P. ; Arikan-Akdagli, S. ; Barac, A. ; Bostanaru, A.C. ; Brito, S. ; Bull, M. ; Çerikçioğlu, N. ; Chapman, B. ; Efstratiou, M.A. ; Ergin, Ç. ; Frenkel, M. ; Gitto, A. ; Gonçalves, C.I. ; Guégan, H. ; Gunde-Cimerman, N. ; Güran, M. ; Irinyi, L. ; Jonikaitė, E. ; Kataržytė, M. ; Klingspor, L. ; Mares, M. ; Meijer, W.G. ; Melchers, W.J.G. ; Meletiadis, J. ; Meyer, W. ; Nastasa, V. ; Babič, M. Novak ; Ogunc, D. ; Ozhak, B. ; Prigitano, A. ; Ranque, S. ; Rusu, R.O. ; Sabino, R. ; Sampaio, A. ; Silva, S. ; Stephens, J.H. ; Tehupeiory-Kooreman, M. ; Tortorano, A.M. ; Velegraki, A. ; Veríssimo, C. ; Wunderlich, G.C. ; Segal, E.

Data: 2021

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.18/7678

Origem: Repositório Científico do Instituto Nacional de Saúde

Assunto(s): Beach; Fungi in Sand; Bathing; Allergenic fungi; Bathing water; Mycosis; Agentes Microbianos e Ambiente; Água e Solo; Infecções Sistémicas e Zoonoses


Descrição

The goal of most studies published on sand contaminants is to gather and discuss knowledge to avoid faecal contamination of water by run-offs and tide retractions. Other life forms in the sand, however, are seldom studied but always pointed out as relevant. The Mycosands initiative was created to generate data on fungi in beach sands and waters, of both coastal and freshwater inland bathing sites. A team of medical mycologists and water quality specialists explored the sand culturable mycobiota of 91 bathing sites, and water of 67 of these, spanning fromthe Atlantic to the EasternMediterranean coasts, including the Italian lakes and the Adriatic, Baltic, and Black Seas. Sydney (Australia) was also included in the study. Thirteen countries took part in the initiative. The present study considered several fungal parameters (all fungi, several species of the genus Aspergillus and Candida and the genera themselves, plus other yeasts, allergenic fungi, dematiaceous fungi and dermatophytes). The study considered four variables that the team expected would influence the results of the analytical parameters, such as coast or inland location, urban and non-urban sites, period of the year, geographical proximity and type of sediment. The genera most frequently found were Aspergillus spp., Candida spp., Fusarium spp. and Cryptococcus spp. both in sand and in water. A site-blind median was found to be 89 Colony-Forming Units (CFU) of fungi per gram of sand in coastal and inland freshwaters, with variability between 0 and 6400 CFU/g. For freshwater sites, that number was 201.7 CFU/g (0, 6400 CFU/g (p = 0.01)) and for coastal sites was 76.7 CFU/g (0,3497.5 CFU/g). For coastalwaters and allwaters, themedianwas 0 CFU/ml (0, 1592 CFU/ml) and for freshwaters 6.7 (0, 310.0) CFU/ml (p < 0.001). The results advocate that beaches should bemonitored for fungi for safer use and better management.

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) Repositório Científico do Instituto Nacional de Saúde
Licença CC
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Documentos Relacionados

Não existem documentos relacionados.