the bilateral project of Republic of Serbia and Republic of Austria 2019-2021(WTZ-SRB12-2018)

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the bilateral project of Republic of Serbia and Republic of Austria 2019-2021(WTZ-SRB12-2018)

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Publications

Impact of untreated wastewaters on the microbiological water quality of the Danube River and its tributaries in Serbia

Kolarević, Stoimir; Micsinai, Adrienn; Szanto-Egesz, Reka; Lukacs, Alena; Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta; Jovanović Marić, Jovana; Đorđević, Ana; Vojnović-Milutinović, Danijela; Kirschner, Alexander; Farnleitner, Andreas; Linke, Rita; Đukić, Aleksandar; Kostić, Jovana; Sunjog, Karolina; Paunović, Momir

(Belgrade: Serbian Society for Microbiology, 2024)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Kolarević, Stoimir
AU  - Micsinai, Adrienn
AU  - Szanto-Egesz, Reka
AU  - Lukacs, Alena
AU  - Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta
AU  - Jovanović Marić, Jovana
AU  - Đorđević, Ana
AU  - Vojnović-Milutinović, Danijela
AU  - Kirschner, Alexander
AU  - Farnleitner, Andreas
AU  - Linke, Rita
AU  - Đukić, Aleksandar
AU  - Kostić, Jovana
AU  - Sunjog, Karolina
AU  - Paunović, Momir
PY  - 2024
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6693
AB  - Pollution of surface waters still represents one of the major environmental challenges in the Republic of Serbia, where wastewaters are discharged directly into the recipients without proper treatment. Within the last decade, we have assessed the microbiological water quality of more than 100 sites situated at different water bodies in Serbia. Quality was determined using faecal indicator bacteria, while microbial source tracking was employed to assess the source of pollution. Almost 50 % of the investigated sites were characterized by critical or even higher level of faecal contamination indicating that untreated wastewaters indeed represent significant pollution pressure on surface waters. Human-associated markers were prevalent in samples from the majority of contaminated sites but the source of pollution was not exclusively human-associated. 
The impact on the water quality of the Danube River was demonstrated in our previous research conducted at the whole river level within the Joint Danube Surveys. In the river stretch from Novi Sad to its confluence with the Velika Morava River, all the midstream samples were critically polluted. In this section, the highest level of pollution was recorded downstream of Belgrade. As ultimate recipients of wastewaters, Danube and its largest tributary Sava currently represent the only solution for disposing of wastewaters originating from the Serbian capital‘s 1,700,000 inhabitants. Such kind of disposal rises additional issues such as antimicrobial resistance and presence of infectious agents in water. For instance during COVID-19 pandemic, we have demonstrated that SARS-CoV-2 RNA can be detected even in surface waters of the Danube River at the sites receiving high wastewater loads from Belgrade which was the unique case for the Basin. 
Despites its extreme importance in this case, wastewater-based epidemiology is neglected in our country and hereby we would like to emphasize the need for implementation of program of such kind in Serbia.
PB  - Belgrade: Serbian Society for Microbiology
C3  - Book of abstracts: 13th Congress of Microbiologists of Serbia: Mikromed Regio 5: From biotechnology to human and planetary health; 2024 Apr 4-6; Belgrade, Serbia
T1  - Impact of untreated wastewaters on the microbiological water quality  of the Danube River  and its tributaries in Serbia
SP  - 65
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6693
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Kolarević, Stoimir and Micsinai, Adrienn and Szanto-Egesz, Reka and Lukacs, Alena and Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta and Jovanović Marić, Jovana and Đorđević, Ana and Vojnović-Milutinović, Danijela and Kirschner, Alexander and Farnleitner, Andreas and Linke, Rita and Đukić, Aleksandar and Kostić, Jovana and Sunjog, Karolina and Paunović, Momir",
year = "2024",
abstract = "Pollution of surface waters still represents one of the major environmental challenges in the Republic of Serbia, where wastewaters are discharged directly into the recipients without proper treatment. Within the last decade, we have assessed the microbiological water quality of more than 100 sites situated at different water bodies in Serbia. Quality was determined using faecal indicator bacteria, while microbial source tracking was employed to assess the source of pollution. Almost 50 % of the investigated sites were characterized by critical or even higher level of faecal contamination indicating that untreated wastewaters indeed represent significant pollution pressure on surface waters. Human-associated markers were prevalent in samples from the majority of contaminated sites but the source of pollution was not exclusively human-associated. 
The impact on the water quality of the Danube River was demonstrated in our previous research conducted at the whole river level within the Joint Danube Surveys. In the river stretch from Novi Sad to its confluence with the Velika Morava River, all the midstream samples were critically polluted. In this section, the highest level of pollution was recorded downstream of Belgrade. As ultimate recipients of wastewaters, Danube and its largest tributary Sava currently represent the only solution for disposing of wastewaters originating from the Serbian capital‘s 1,700,000 inhabitants. Such kind of disposal rises additional issues such as antimicrobial resistance and presence of infectious agents in water. For instance during COVID-19 pandemic, we have demonstrated that SARS-CoV-2 RNA can be detected even in surface waters of the Danube River at the sites receiving high wastewater loads from Belgrade which was the unique case for the Basin. 
Despites its extreme importance in this case, wastewater-based epidemiology is neglected in our country and hereby we would like to emphasize the need for implementation of program of such kind in Serbia.",
publisher = "Belgrade: Serbian Society for Microbiology",
journal = "Book of abstracts: 13th Congress of Microbiologists of Serbia: Mikromed Regio 5: From biotechnology to human and planetary health; 2024 Apr 4-6; Belgrade, Serbia",
title = "Impact of untreated wastewaters on the microbiological water quality  of the Danube River  and its tributaries in Serbia",
pages = "65",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6693"
}
Kolarević, S., Micsinai, A., Szanto-Egesz, R., Lukacs, A., Kračun-Kolarević, M., Jovanović Marić, J., Đorđević, A., Vojnović-Milutinović, D., Kirschner, A., Farnleitner, A., Linke, R., Đukić, A., Kostić, J., Sunjog, K.,& Paunović, M.. (2024). Impact of untreated wastewaters on the microbiological water quality  of the Danube River  and its tributaries in Serbia. in Book of abstracts: 13th Congress of Microbiologists of Serbia: Mikromed Regio 5: From biotechnology to human and planetary health; 2024 Apr 4-6; Belgrade, Serbia
Belgrade: Serbian Society for Microbiology., 65.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6693
Kolarević S, Micsinai A, Szanto-Egesz R, Lukacs A, Kračun-Kolarević M, Jovanović Marić J, Đorđević A, Vojnović-Milutinović D, Kirschner A, Farnleitner A, Linke R, Đukić A, Kostić J, Sunjog K, Paunović M. Impact of untreated wastewaters on the microbiological water quality  of the Danube River  and its tributaries in Serbia. in Book of abstracts: 13th Congress of Microbiologists of Serbia: Mikromed Regio 5: From biotechnology to human and planetary health; 2024 Apr 4-6; Belgrade, Serbia. 2024;:65.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6693 .
Kolarević, Stoimir, Micsinai, Adrienn, Szanto-Egesz, Reka, Lukacs, Alena, Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta, Jovanović Marić, Jovana, Đorđević, Ana, Vojnović-Milutinović, Danijela, Kirschner, Alexander, Farnleitner, Andreas, Linke, Rita, Đukić, Aleksandar, Kostić, Jovana, Sunjog, Karolina, Paunović, Momir, "Impact of untreated wastewaters on the microbiological water quality  of the Danube River  and its tributaries in Serbia" in Book of abstracts: 13th Congress of Microbiologists of Serbia: Mikromed Regio 5: From biotechnology to human and planetary health; 2024 Apr 4-6; Belgrade, Serbia (2024):65,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6693 .