Title: Wetland Creation and Restoration
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2Wetland Creation
- Why?
- Can it be done?
- Does a created wetland serve the same ecological
purposes as a natural wetland?
3Why Build Treatment Wetlands?
- Improve water quality
- Secondarily, provide wildlife and other wetland
functions.
4Ecological Services
- biological filters
- natures kidneys
- yada-yada-yada-fact or more environmental hype
from tree huggers? - Not a new concept
- Germany in early 1950s
- US in late 60s, dramatically increasing in 1970s
5Whats the Goal?
- Removal of contaminants from water
- contaminant-any undesirable constituent in the
water that may directly or indirectly affect
human or environmental health - anything that degrades the water so that it
cannot be used for its natural or intended
purpose. - might include
- toxic organics and metals
- non-toxics-nutrients
- thermal pollution
6Uses
- Municipal wastewater
- Acid mine drainage (AMD)
- Landfill leachate
- Nonpoint urban/agriculture runoff
7Acid Mine Drainage
Municipal Wastewater Wetland
Landfill Leachate Wetland
Agricultural Runoff Wetland
8Types of Treatment Wetlands
- natural wetlands-use for this often prohibited by
laws created to protect them - surface flow wetlands
- subsurface flow wetlands
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12What Can Be Treated?
- municipal wastewater (sewage)-residential and
commercial sources may range from single homes
to regional scale - Iron Bridge wetland (FL) is 1200 A (480 ha)
- agricultural wastewater-runoff from cropland,
pasture, milking and washing barns, and feedlots. - industrial wastewater-pulp paper manufacturing,
food processing, slaughtering and rendering,
chemical manufacturing, refining, and landfill
leachate
13Overview of Mechanisms of Contaminant Removal
14Contaminant Removal Mechanisms
- Physical
- especially good for sedimentation of
particulates low velocity laminar flow - results in accumulation of solids
- may be resuspended by wind-driven turbulence,
bioturbation (by humans or animals), and gas
lifting (bubbling of methane, CO2, etc.) - Biological
- Chemical
15Contaminant Removal Mechanisms
- Biological-perhaps most important?
- Plant uptake
- nutrients (NO3, PO4, ammonium)
- toxics (bioremediation) e.g., lead, cadmium
- rate of removal dependent on growth rate and
concentration of the contaminant in the tissue - woody plants sequester more and for longer times
- herbaceous plants (e.g., Typha) have higher rates
- Algae can be significant but are more susceptible
to toxicity of metals however, have rapid
turnover - where does the contaminant go?
- re-release accumulation in peat
16Contaminant Removal Mechanisms
- Biological (continued)
- Microbial processes
- may uptake contaminants in their biomass
- conversions by metabolic processes probably more
important - carbon -gt CH4 or CO2 offgassing removes this C
- inorganic Nitrogen (nitrate ammonium)
- nitrate denitrification facilitated by
Pseudomonas spp. - NO3 -gt N2 offgassing removes this N
- ammonium nitrification and denitrification
facilitated by Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter spp - NH4 -gt NO3 (aerobic) -gt N2 (anaerobic)
17Contaminant Removal Mechanisms
- Chemical
- sorption (most important)
- transfer of ions from solution phase (water) to
solid phase (soil) - includes adsorption and precipitation
- adsorption-attachment of ions to soil particles,
either by cation exchange (weak attachment to
negatively charged clay or organic particles)
effective with ammonium and most trace metals
(e.g., Cu2) - or chemisorption-stronger bonding attachment of
some metals and organics to clays, iron or
aluminum oxides, and organic matter effective
with phosphate - precipitation-combine with iron and aluminium
oxides forming new, stable, solid compounds also
production of highly insoluble metal sulfides, a
way of immobilizing many toxic metals
18Contaminant Removal Mechanisms
- Chemical
- volatilization-diffusion from water to atmosphere
- e,g, ammonia (NH3) (aq) -gt ammonia (gas)
- iff pH gt 8.5 if pH is less than that, N is in
the form of ammonium which is not volatile - many other organics are volatile
- increases air pollution?
19Examples and Case Studies
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24Olentangy River Wetlands at The Ohio State
University
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26Its Good to be a Buckeye!
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