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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Florence, South Carolina » Coastal Plain Soil, Water and Plant Conservation Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #206627

Title: Swine lagoon wastewater treatment in marsh-pond/floating wetland-marsh constructed wetland

Author
item Hunt, Patrick
item POACH, MATTHEW - MA DEPT ENVIRON PROTEC
item Shappell, Nancy
item Matheny, Terry
item REDDY, G - NC A&T STATE UNIV.
item Ro, Kyoung
item Szogi, Ariel

Submitted to: Air and Waste Management Annual Conference Proceedings
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/1/2007
Publication Date: 9/16/2007
Citation: Hunt, P.G., Poach, M.E., Shappell, N.W., Matheny, T.A., Reddy, G.B., Ro, K.S., Szogi, A.A. 2007. Swine lagoon wastewater treatment in marsh-pond/floating wetland-marsh constructed wetland. In: International Symposium on Air Quality and Waste Management for Agriculture, 16-19 September, Broomfield, Colorado. 7 p. 2007 CDROM.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Constructed wetlands have been used effectively to reduce the mass loads of organic and nutrient components from swine anaerobic lagoons. Continuous marsh wetlands with gentle slope and intermittent flows seem to be the best for promoting oxidation and minimizing ammonia volatilization. However, the pond section of the marsh-pond-marsh section could potentially be effectively aerated by mechanical means or plant root transport from selected wetland plants. The objective of this research was to determine if covering the pond section with floating wetland vegetation could enhance nitrogen cycling, reduce ammonia volatilization, and lower estrogenic levels. Marsh-pond-marsh wetlands were retrofitted with a floating fabric cover containing slots for wetland plant establishment. Both mechanically aerated and naturally aerated conditions were evaluated for estrogenic component removals, ammonia volatilization, and total nutrient removals. Both the covered and uncovered wetlands reduced the estrogenic levels in the swine wastewater. The floating marsh substantially reduced the ammonia volatilization, but it did not promote significantly greater nitrogen treatment than reported for continuous marsh wetlands.