Sources of manganese in the diet tend to be grains (37% of dietary manganese), tea (20%), and vegetable products (18%).[1]
Manganese is present in water, as it normally exists in running water (due to being prominent in the earth's crust) but industries using manganese in production could also contaminate local water supplies;[2] ambient concentrations of manganese vary between sea water (0.4-10µg/L; average of 2µg/L[3][4]), fresh water (highly variable between 1-200µg/L[4]), and in the US some river testing has noted various concentrations from below 11µg/L to above 51µg/L.[3][2] In regards to drinking water, it is estimated that 20µg of manganese is ingested daily from drinking water assuming an intake of 2 liters of water with the median concentration of 10µg/L[2] which is significantly less than estimated dietary intake of manganese (between 0.7mg and 10.9mg daily[5]) and approximately 1/100th the adequate intake (AI) for adults.
While manganese is present in the drinking water supply, it is at a small enough concentration that is likely doesn't play a major role in human health and nutrition (for better or worse)