Chapter
May 14, 2020
World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2020

Efficiency of Constructed Wetlands for Nutrient Removal

Publication: World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2020: Groundwater, Sustainability, Hydro-Climate/Climate Change, and Environmental Engineering

ABSTRACT

Currently, nutrients are not removed by standard wastewater treatment processes. Constructed wetlands placed after conventional wastewater treatment may be one way to remove nutrients before wastewater flows to receiving waters. To evaluate the effectiveness of constructed wetlands on nutrient removal, 5 constructed wetlands with varying amounts of sandy loam, compost, and shredded bark were tested. The same three plant species were planted in each wetland. Treated wastewater was placed in each planter and samples were taken after 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 days. On average, total phosphorus increased by 289%, phosphate increased by 130%, total nitrogen decreased by 70%, nitrate increased by 23%, and ammonia decreased by 83%. The only nutrient impacted by residence time was ammonia where a peak residence time was achieved after 2–4 days. Soil mixture impacted total phosphorus, total nitrogen, and ammonia; the planters with 20% or less compost retained more nutrients than the planters with 30–40% compost. Leach test data suggests that the increase in total phosphorus and phosphate were caused by leaching of organic material present in the compost. Results show that constructed wetlands effectively remove nitrogen, but do not effectively remove phosphorus with the soil mixtures tested in this study.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This project was funded by the Shiley Fellows and Butine Fund. We would like to thank Jacob Amos and Christina Chrestatos for help with constructing the constructed wetlands planters, and the Columbia Boulevard Wastewater Treatment Plant for providing secondary effluent wastewater.

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Go to World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2020
World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2020: Groundwater, Sustainability, Hydro-Climate/Climate Change, and Environmental Engineering
Pages: 1 - 9
Editors: Sajjad Ahmad, Ph.D., and Regan Murray, Ph.D.
ISBN (Online): 978-0-7844-8296-4

History

Published online: May 14, 2020
Published in print: May 14, 2020

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Cara Poor, Ph.D., M.ASCE [email protected]
P.E.
Shiley School of Engineering, Univ. of Portland, Portland, OR. E-mail: [email protected]
Kyla Burrill [email protected]
Shiley School of Engineering, Univ. of Portland, Portland, OR. E-mail: [email protected]
Mason Jarvis [email protected]
Shiley School of Engineering, Univ. of Portland, Portland, OR. E-mail: [email protected]

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