Wetland Creation and Restoration - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Wetland Creation and Restoration

Description:

Wetland Creation Why? Can it be done? Does a created wetland serve the same ecological purposes as a natural wetland? Why Build Treatment Wetlands? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:177
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: JerryS78
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Wetland Creation and Restoration


1
(No Transcript)
2
Wetland Creation
  • Why?
  • Can it be done?
  • Does a created wetland serve the same ecological
    purposes as a natural wetland?

3
Why Build Treatment Wetlands?
  • Improve water quality
  • Secondarily, provide wildlife and other wetland
    functions.

4
Ecological 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

5
Whats 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

6
Uses
  • Municipal wastewater
  • Acid mine drainage (AMD)
  • Landfill leachate
  • Nonpoint urban/agriculture runoff

7
Acid Mine Drainage
Municipal Wastewater Wetland
Landfill Leachate Wetland
Agricultural Runoff Wetland
8
Types of Treatment Wetlands
  • natural wetlands-use for this often prohibited by
    laws created to protect them
  • surface flow wetlands
  • subsurface flow wetlands

9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
What 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

13
Overview of Mechanisms of Contaminant Removal
14
Contaminant 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

15
Contaminant 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

16
Contaminant 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)

17
Contaminant 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

18
Contaminant 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?

19
Examples and Case Studies
20
(No Transcript)
21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
Olentangy River Wetlands at The Ohio State
University
25
(No Transcript)
26
Its Good to be a Buckeye!
27
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com