Soil amendments and water management to improve attenuation and recovery of wastewater originated nutrients through a vegetation filter.

J Environ Manage

IMDEA Water Institute, Avda. Punto Com 2, 28805, Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, Spain; University of Alcalá, Department of Geology, Geography and Environment, A-II km 33,0, 28805, Madrid, Spain.

Published: November 2024

Vegetation filters (VFs) are on-site wastewater (WW) treatments that can be considered as a nature-based solution (NbS). They are green infrastructures that provide several environmental benefits such as non-potable water reuse, contamination reduction, biomass production, landscaping improvements and CO fixation, among others. However, nutrient leaching, especially nitrate, partially exists. To overcome this limitation, operational parameters related to the irrigation water management and soil amendments were tested in a real system receiving WW from an office building operated along 4 years. The attenuation of N is improved (up to 83%) in the vadose zone by boosting biodegradation. Lower hydraulic loads and more frequent irrigation events using drippers and the incorporation of woodchips as a layer above the topsoil promote denitrification processes. Changes in organic carbon characteristics also confirm that biodegradation is enhanced. P attenuation is a result of abiotic processes, mainly driven by chemical equilibriums between the liquid and the sorbed and/or precipitated phase and, when uncontrolled changes in the WW quality occurs, removal efficiency is negatively affected. However, only 10% of the samples collected at 45 cm depth present concentrations above 2 mg/L. The woodchips application does not seem to ameliorate P removal regardless of the application method. The implemented measures allow higher soil water content, infiltration and groundwater recharge and prevents aquifer contamination.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.122566DOI Listing

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