Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 10 Par: 2 (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Evaluating the Water Quality Benefits of a Bioswale in Brunswick County, North Carolina (NC), USA

Rebecca A. Purvis    
Ryan J. Winston    
William F. Hunt    
Brian Lipscomb    
Karthik Narayanaswamy    
Andrew McDaniel    
Matthew S. Lauffer and Susan Libes    

Resumen

Standard roadside vegetated swales often do not provide consistent pollutant removal. To increase infiltration and pollutant removal, bioswales are designed with an underlying soil media and an underdrain. However, there are little data on the ability of these stormwater control measures (SCMs) to reduce pollutant concentrations. A bioswale treating road runoff was monitored, with volume-proportional, composite stormwater runoff samples taken for the inlet, overflow, and underdrain outflow. Samples were tested for total suspended solids (TSS), total volatile suspended solids (VSS), enterococcus, E. coli, and turbidity. Underdrain flow was significantly cleaner than untreated road runoff for all monitored pollutants. As expected, the water quality of overflow was not significantly improved, since little to no interaction with soils occurred for this portion of the water balance. However, overflow bacteria concentrations were similar to those from the underdrain perhaps due to a first flush of bacteria which was treated by the soil media. For all sampling locations, enterococci concentrations were always higher than the USEPA geometric mean recommendation of 35 Most Probable Number (MPN)/100 mL, but there were events where the fecal coliform concentrations was below the USEPA?s 200 MPN/100 mL limit. A reduction in TSS concentration was seen for both overflow and underdrain flow, and only the underdrain effluent concentrations were below the North Carolina?s high quality water limit of 20 mg/L. Comparing results herein to standard swales, the bioswale has the potential to provide greater treatment and become a popular tool.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Elizabeth Anne Thilmany, Serena Newton, Paul Goeringer and Rachel E. Rosenberg Goldstein    
Water reuse, the beneficial use of highly treated municipal wastewater (reclaimed water), is expanding throughout the United States (U.S.); however, there are currently no federal reclaimed water use regulations, only guidelines. As a result, state polic... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Peiyue Li and Jianhua Wu    
This editorial introduces the Special Issue titled ?Water Resources and Sustainable Development,? underscoring the critical need for sustainable management of water resources in light of increasing demand, climate change impacts, and pollution. The issue... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Koichiro Hirose, Koji Fukudome, Hiroya Mamori and Makoto Yamamoto    
Ice crystal icing occurs in jet engine compressors, which can severely degrade jet engine performance. In this study, we developed an ice crystal trajectory simulation, considering the state changes of ice crystals with a forced convection model, indicat... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Yu Zhang, Xiangqiao Wang, Yuwen Yang and Bo Chen    
China has a vast territory and a long history of inland navigation. This paper is based on the Shaying River Shenqiu hub project, and a normal physical model with a geometric scale of 65 was established to simulate the characteristics of water and sedime... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Kaiwen Song, Xiujuan Jiang, Tianye Wang, Dengming Yan, Hongshi Xu and Zening Wu    
The uneven spatial and temporal distribution of water resources has consistently been one of the most significant limiting factors for social development in many regions. Furthermore, with the intensification of climate change, this inequality is progres... ver más
Revista: Water