I see you're in Finland. What sort of issue is crypto in the Western United States?
Here data from around the world:
LeChevallier et al. (1991a) examined 66 source water supplies in 14 states and 1 province in Canada. Sources were characterized as protected from or impacted by industrial pollution. Of 85 samples collected, 87.1% were positive for oocysts, with concentrations ranging from 0.07 to 84/L.
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McTigue et al. (1998) conducted a year-long study of 100 surface water treatment plants in the United States, examining raw and treated drinking water. Cryptosporidium was detected in 77% of the raw water samples and in 15% of the treated water samples. In raw waters, oocyst levels ranged from 0.5 to 117 per 100 L and in finished drinking water the levels were 0.04 to 0.8 per 100 L.
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In Germany, source waters at six water treatment plants the average number of oocysts was 116 per
100 L; in finished drinking water, 29.8% of 47 were positive for Cryptosporidium (Karanis et al., 1998).
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In Asia, Hsu et al. (1999) found high levels of oocysts in the watershed area and the Kau-Ping River,
which serves 2.5 million people in Taiwan. Raw water samples (75% positive) were as high as 12,516
oocysts per 100 L at one site, whereas treated drinking water levels (40% of samples positive) were
reported as high as 159 oocysts per 100 L.
In Hong Kong, in the Lam Tsuen River, oocysts were found
at one of four sampling sites each at concentrations of 3 to 30 per 10 L; along the Shing Mun River, a
single site was positive for Cryptosporidium once with 13 oocysts per 10 L (Ho and Tan, 1998).
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In Israel, 80% of 15 samples from five streams were positive for Cryptosporidium with an average
concentration of 0.04 to 1.9 oocysts per liter (Zuckerman et al, 1997).
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About North American Watersheds:
"The results suggest that most surface water systems would require, on average, a 3-log reduction in source water Cryptosporidium levels to meet potable water goals."
http://aem.asm.org/cgi/content/abstract/69/2/971