Performance of the Giant Reed (Arundo donax) in Experimental Wetlands Receiving Variable Loads of Industrial Stormwater
Two emergent macrophytes, Arundo donax and Phragmites australis , were established in experimental subsurface flow, gravel-based constructed wetlands (CWs) and challenged by untreated stormwater collected from the hard-pan and other surfaces of a dairy processing factory in south-west Victoria, Aust...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Water, air, and soil pollution air, and soil pollution, 2012-02, Vol.223 (2), p.549-557 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Two emergent macrophytes,
Arundo donax
and
Phragmites australis
, were established in experimental subsurface flow, gravel-based constructed wetlands (CWs) and challenged by untreated stormwater collected from the hard-pan and other surfaces of a dairy processing factory in south-west Victoria, Australia. The hydraulic loading rate was tested at two levels, sequentially, 3.75 and 7.5 cm day
−1
. Some of the monitored variables were removed more efficiently by the planted beds in comparison to unplanted CWs (biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP);
p
0.007) at 3.75 cm day
−1
or SS and TN at 7.5 cm day
−1
. At 3.75 cm day
−1
, BOD, SS, TN and TP removal in the
A. donax
and
P. australis
CWs was 71%, 61%, 78% and 75% and 65%, 60%, 73% and 41%, respectively. Nutrient removal at 7.5 cm day
−1
in the
A. donax
and
P. australis
beds was 87%, 91%, 84% and 71% and 96%, 94%, 87% and 55%, respectively. As expected, the
A. donax
CWs produced considerably more biomass (10 ± 1.2 kg wet weight) than the
P. australis
CWs (2.7 ± 1.2 kg wet weight). This equates to approximately 107 and 36 tonnes ha
−1
year
−1
biomass (dry weight) for
A. donax
and
P. australis
, respectively (assuming 250 days of growing season and single-cut harvest). The performance similarity of the
A. donax
- and
P. australis
-planted CWs indicates that either may be used in HSSF wetlands treating dairy factory stormwater, although the planting of
A. donax
provides additional opportunities for secondary income streams through utilisation of the biomass produced. |
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ISSN: | 0049-6979 1573-2932 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11270-011-0881-y |