Performance of Various Filtering Media for the Treatment of Cow Manure from Exercise Pens—A Laboratory Study

During summer and winter months, pastures and outdoor pens represent the conventional means of providing exercise for dairy cows housed in tie-stall barns in the province of Québec, Canada. Unfortunately, outdoor pens require large spaces, and their leachates do not meet Québec’s environmental regul...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water (Basel) 2022-06, Vol.14 (12), p.1912
Hauptverfasser: Álvarez-Chávez, Elizabeth, Godbout, Stéphane, Rousseau, Alain N., Brassard, Patrick, Fournel, Sébastien
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container_end_page
container_issue 12
container_start_page 1912
container_title Water (Basel)
container_volume 14
creator Álvarez-Chávez, Elizabeth
Godbout, Stéphane
Rousseau, Alain N.
Brassard, Patrick
Fournel, Sébastien
description During summer and winter months, pastures and outdoor pens represent the conventional means of providing exercise for dairy cows housed in tie-stall barns in the province of Québec, Canada. Unfortunately, outdoor pens require large spaces, and their leachates do not meet Québec’s environmental regulations. Therefore, there is a need to develop alternative approaches for these so-called wintering pens. A sustainable year-long approach could be a stand-off pad consisting of a filtering media to manage adequately water exiting the pad. Different filtering materials can be used and mixed (gravel, woodchips, biochar, sphagnum peat moss, sand, etc.). To find the best material and/or mixes, a laboratory study was carried out using 15 PVC pipes (5 cm in diameter and 50 cm long) to test five different combinations of materials over a 3-week period. Different contaminant-removal efficiencies were achieved with the alternative materials, including for chemical oxygen demand (11–38%), phosphates (8–23%), suspended solids (33–57%), and turbidity (23–58%). Alternative treatments with sand, sphagnum peat moss, and biochar improved the filtration capacity when compared to the conventional material (woodchips). However, after three weeks of experimentation, the treatment efficiency of sand gradually decreased for pollutants such as suspended solids and phosphates.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/w14121912
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Alternative treatments with sand, sphagnum peat moss, and biochar improved the filtration capacity when compared to the conventional material (woodchips). 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source Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
subjects Barns
Cattle manure
Charcoal
Chemical oxygen demand
Contaminants
Dairy cattle
Drainage
Effluents
Environmental law
Environmental regulations
Experimentation
Filtration
Gravel
Laboratories
Laws, regulations and rules
Leachates
Livestock
Manures
Mosses
Nitrogen
Pasture
Peat
Pens
Phosphates
Pollutant removal
Pollutants
Pollution control
R&D
Research & development
Sand
Solid suspensions
Suspended solids
Turbidity
Water purification
Wood products
title Performance of Various Filtering Media for the Treatment of Cow Manure from Exercise Pens—A Laboratory Study
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