“…Groundwaters contaminated by OSTDS have impacted a wide variety of other urbanized estuaries and coastal waters, including Bermuda (Lapointe and O'Connell, 1989;McGlathery, 1995), the Florida Keys (Lapointe et al, 1990;Tomasko and Lapointe, 1991;Lapointe et al, 1994), Cape Cod, MA (Valiela et al, 1992;Weiskel and Howes, 1992;Valiela et al, 1997), Outer Banks, North Carolina (Mallin, 2013), Chesapeake Bay (Reay, 2004), and Puerto Rico (Olsen et al, 2010). In addition, bacterial contamination of groundwaters and surface waters has been associated with unsuitable soil characteristics and high densities of OSTDS on the IRL watersheds (Lapointe and Krupa, 1995a,b;Belanger et al, 2007;Lapointe et al, 2012) and is considered a primary source of bacterial contamination associated with immunologic perturbations in populations of bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus Montagu, in the IRL (Schaefer et al, 2009;Bossart et al, 2014). Schaefer et al (2011) found a positive correlation between the number of IRL bottlenose dolphins colonized by Escherichia coli and the number of septic tanks in the area they lived; with the highest number of both being in the northern segments of the IRL.…”