MyJournals Home  

RSS FeedsSustainability, Vol. 8, Pages 972: Nitrogen and Sediment Capture of a Floating Treatment Wetland on an Urban Stormwater Retention Pond--The Case of the Rain Project (Sustainability)

 
 

24 september 2016 13:15:46

 
Sustainability, Vol. 8, Pages 972: Nitrogen and Sediment Capture of a Floating Treatment Wetland on an Urban Stormwater Retention Pond--The Case of the Rain Project (Sustainability)
 


Nitrogen is widely recognized as a chronic urban stormwater pollutant. In the United States, wet retention ponds have become widely used to treat urban runoff for quantity and quality. While wet ponds typically function well for the removal of sediments, nitrogen removal, performance can be inconsistent due to poor design and/or lack of maintenance. Retrofitting ponds to improve their nitrogen capture performance, however, is often expensive. By hydroponically growing macrophytes on wet ponds, floating treatment wetlands (FTW) may provide a cheap, sustainable means of improving nitrogen removal efficiency of aging stormwater ponds. Few studies have been performed on the effectiveness real-world stormwater systems, however. In this study, we investigated the nitrogen and sediment capture performance of a 50 m2 floating treatment wetland deployed for 137 days on a stormwater wet pond located within an urban university campus near Washington, D.C. A total of 2684 g of biomass was produced, 3100 g of sediment captured, and 191 g of nitrogen removed from the pond. Although biomass production was relatively low (53 g/m2), we found that nitrogen uptake by the plants (0.009 g/m2/day) was comparable to contemporary FTW studies.


 
129 viewsCategory: Ecology
 
Sustainability, Vol. 8, Pages 971: Can Organic Farming Reduce Vulnerabilities and Enhance the Resilience of the European Food System? A Critical Assessment Using System Dynamics Structural Thinking Tools (Sustainability)
Sustainability, Vol. 8, Pages 960: New Algorithm for Evaluating the Green Supply Chain Performance in an Uncertain Environment (Sustainability)
 
 
blog comments powered by Disqus


MyJournals.org
The latest issues of all your favorite science journals on one page

Username:
Password:

Register | Retrieve

Search:

Ecology


Copyright © 2008 - 2024 Indigonet Services B.V.. Contact: Tim Hulsen. Read here our privacy notice.
Other websites of Indigonet Services B.V.: Nieuws Vacatures News Tweets Nachrichten