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Trajano Gomes da Silva, D.; Ebdon, J.; Mwangi, T.; Okotto-okotto, J.; Wright, J.

Bacteroides phages recovered from human and animal faecal matrices in rural Kenya

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This dataset is available under the terms of the Open Government Licence

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https://doi.org/10.5285/02c8a6b0-e59e-4278-b9a2-9958cd5a2c3c
This data describes the recovering and isolation processes of Bacteroides spp. strains from human and cattle faecal sources from rural areas in Siaya County (Kenya), and occurred between 7th and 28th of June 2018. The data also includes the detection of bacteriophages (infecting these Bacteroides spp. host strains) in conjunction with traditional faecal indicator organisms in water sources from Kisumu and Siaya County (Kenya) occurring between June 18th 2018 and June 13th 2019. Exact location (coordinates) of the sample points are also described in the data set. A microbiological technique using Bile Esculin Bacteroides (BBE) agar was used for the recovering and isolation processes of Bacteroides spp. strains. Standard ISO (7899-2, 9308-1, 10705-2 and 10705-4) techniques, such as membrane filtration and the double-agar-layer methods, were used for the detection of bacteriophages and traditional faecal indicator organisms. The purpose of data collection was to develop new markers that could identify cattle and/or human sources of faecal contamination, which could be used as part of a Microbial Source Tracking (MST) tool box. Technicians and researchers from the University of Brighton (UK), University of Southampton (UK), from the Victoria Institute for Research on Environment and Development (VIRED) (KE) and from the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) (KE) were responsible for the collection and interpretation of data.
Publication date: 2019-12-06
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Format

Comma-separated values (CSV)

Spatial information

Study area
Spatial representation type
Tabular (text)
Spatial reference system
WGS 84

Temporal information

Temporal extent
2018-06-01    to    2019-06-30

Provenance & quality

The data came into existence after three steps: firstly a field collection of cattle and human faecal material for the isolation and recovering of Bacteroides spp. host strains ; secondly laboratory work were performed for the isolation of those strains; and thirdly field and laboratory work were done for assessing levels of bacteriophages and faecal indicator organism in environmental waters. Besides basic PPE (e.g.: gloves, glasses,..), fieldwork instrumentation included sterile wooden spatulas and an adapted sampling pole for the collection of cattle and human faeces from water pan shorelines and school pit latrines, respectively. Faecal and water samples were contained in sterile plastic containers in cooler bags containing ice packs and transported to KEMRI Kisian laboratory within 4 hours of collection. In KEMRI Kisian laboratory a total of 10 (5 from cattle and 5 from human faeces) Bacteroides spp. strains were recovered, isolated and preserved (frozen) for posterior use. These recently isolated Bacteroides spp. were then used as hosts, in the double-agar-layer method, for the detection of bacteriophages in Kenyan water sources. The units used for the detection of bacteriophages and traditional faecal indicator organism were plaque and /or colony forming units per 1 mL or 100 mL of water sample (PFU / 1 mL; PFU / 100 mL and CFU / 100 mL). Calibration of laboratory instrumentation as well as the use of blank samples (distilled water) were employed as data quality controls.

Licensing and constraints

This dataset is available under the terms of the Open Government Licence

Cite this dataset as:
Trajano Gomes da Silva, D.; Ebdon, J.; Mwangi, T.; Okotto-okotto, J.; Wright, J. (2019). Bacteroides phages recovered from human and animal faecal matrices in rural Kenya. NERC Environmental Information Data Centre. https://doi.org/10.5285/02c8a6b0-e59e-4278-b9a2-9958cd5a2c3c

Correspondence/contact details

Trajano Gomes da Silva, D.
University of Brighton
 D.TrajanoGomesdaSilva2@brighton.ac.uk

Authors

Trajano Gomes da Silva, D.
University of Brighton
Ebdon, J.
University of Brighton
Mwangi, T.
Kenya Medical Research Institute
Okotto-okotto, J.
Victoria Institute for Research on Environment and Development
Wright, J.
University of Southampton

Other contacts

Custodian
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre
 info@eidc.ac.uk
Publisher
NERC Environmental Information Data Centre
 info@eidc.ac.uk

Additional metadata

Topic categories
environment
Keywords
bacteriophages , Bacteroides , drinking water , faecal bacterium , Faecal Indicator Organisms (FIO) , Kenya , Microbial Source Tracking (MST) , Water quality
Last updated
21 March 2025 11:11