Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading

The discharge of raw faecal sludge directly into the environment is a common practice that threatens environmental and public health in low-income countries. Planted drying beds are a promising and low-cost option for treatment of faecal sludge and the production of fodder plants, but current resear...

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Main Authors: Kengne, E.S., Kengne, I.M., Nzouebet, W.A.L., Akoa, A., Hung Nguyen-Viet, Strande, L.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2014
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69442
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author Kengne, E.S.
Kengne, I.M.
Nzouebet, W.A.L.
Akoa, A.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Strande, L.
author_browse Akoa, A.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Kengne, E.S.
Kengne, I.M.
Nzouebet, W.A.L.
Strande, L.
author_facet Kengne, E.S.
Kengne, I.M.
Nzouebet, W.A.L.
Akoa, A.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Strande, L.
author_sort Kengne, E.S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The discharge of raw faecal sludge directly into the environment is a common practice that threatens environmental and public health in low-income countries. Planted drying beds are a promising and low-cost option for treatment of faecal sludge and the production of fodder plants, but current research shows the leachate quality does not meet guidelines for discharge. This paper investigates the use of Vertical Flow Constructed Wetlands (VFCWs) planted with Echinochloa pyramidalis for polishing of leachate from faecal sludge drying beds. At a pilot-scale, three hydraulic loads (50, 100 and 150 mm/d) were applied with single loadings once a week on VFCWs (corresponding to 31 ± 9, 63 ± 19, 94 ± 28 g/m2/month of BOD5; 21 ± 6, 42 ± 12, 63 ± 19 TKN; and 2 ± 1; 4 ± 4; 6 ± 6 PO4–P, respectively, for hydraulic loading rates of 50, 100 and 150 mm/d). Infiltration flow rate, plant growth, rhizospheric bacteria, and leachate characteristics were monitored. VFCWs were effective in reducing on average more than 80% of the pollutants monitored (COD, BOD5, NH4–N, TKN, PO4–P, and faecal bioindicators), which met all National Cameroon and WHO guidelines for safe reuse in agriculture, except for total nitrogen and faecal indicators. Results confirmed a correlation between plant density and rhizospheric bacteria growth with increasing hydraulic load. These are important results, demonstrating that VFCWs can operate efficiently at multiple hydraulic loadings, and are hence adaptable to different sized treatment schemes. It also illustrates that if plant production for fodder is a goal, increased loading rates are preferable as they achieve overall treatment goals and result in greater plant production.
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spelling CGSpace694422024-05-01T08:18:07Z Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading Kengne, E.S. Kengne, I.M. Nzouebet, W.A.L. Akoa, A. Hung Nguyen-Viet Strande, L. The discharge of raw faecal sludge directly into the environment is a common practice that threatens environmental and public health in low-income countries. Planted drying beds are a promising and low-cost option for treatment of faecal sludge and the production of fodder plants, but current research shows the leachate quality does not meet guidelines for discharge. This paper investigates the use of Vertical Flow Constructed Wetlands (VFCWs) planted with Echinochloa pyramidalis for polishing of leachate from faecal sludge drying beds. At a pilot-scale, three hydraulic loads (50, 100 and 150 mm/d) were applied with single loadings once a week on VFCWs (corresponding to 31 ± 9, 63 ± 19, 94 ± 28 g/m2/month of BOD5; 21 ± 6, 42 ± 12, 63 ± 19 TKN; and 2 ± 1; 4 ± 4; 6 ± 6 PO4–P, respectively, for hydraulic loading rates of 50, 100 and 150 mm/d). Infiltration flow rate, plant growth, rhizospheric bacteria, and leachate characteristics were monitored. VFCWs were effective in reducing on average more than 80% of the pollutants monitored (COD, BOD5, NH4–N, TKN, PO4–P, and faecal bioindicators), which met all National Cameroon and WHO guidelines for safe reuse in agriculture, except for total nitrogen and faecal indicators. Results confirmed a correlation between plant density and rhizospheric bacteria growth with increasing hydraulic load. These are important results, demonstrating that VFCWs can operate efficiently at multiple hydraulic loadings, and are hence adaptable to different sized treatment schemes. It also illustrates that if plant production for fodder is a goal, increased loading rates are preferable as they achieve overall treatment goals and result in greater plant production. 2014-10 2015-12-30T11:40:52Z 2015-12-30T11:40:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69442 en Limited Access Elsevier Kengne, E.S., Kengne, I.M., Nzouebet, W.A.L., Akoa, A., Hung Nguyen-Viet and Strande, L. 2014. Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading. Ecological Engineering 71: 384-393.
spellingShingle Kengne, E.S.
Kengne, I.M.
Nzouebet, W.A.L.
Akoa, A.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Strande, L.
Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading
title Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading
title_full Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading
title_fullStr Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading
title_full_unstemmed Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading
title_short Performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate: Effect of hydraulic loading
title_sort performance of vertical flow constructed wetlands for faecal sludge drying bed leachate effect of hydraulic loading
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69442
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