Abstract

Many studies have reported conventional wastewater treatment plants as one of the main sources of microplastics (MPs). However, constructed wetlands (CWs) as a nature-based wastewater treatment system have received little attention. This study investigated the influence of biofilm, media type and earthworms on the fate and removal of MPs in a short-term (45d) experiment with unplanted lab-scale vertical flow CWs (VFCWs). In sand-filled VFCWs, MPs were retained in the first 10cm, and the removal efficiency was 100%, regardless of the presence of a biofilm. When gravel was used as filling material, the removal efficiency of MPs was stable at 96%, but the MPs were distributed throughout the 80cm high VFCWs. In the presence of earthworms, the maximum depth that MPs reached within sand-filled VFCWs increased from 10 to 15cm. Furthermore, the MPs concentration at a depth of 3-6cm and 6-10cm increased 2 and 10 fold respectively compared to the same VFCWs without earthworms. Although no MPs were detected in the sand from deep layers (15-80cm), transport of MPs from top to the bottom by earthworms was found, and a few MPs were detected in the effluent, leading to a removal efficiency of 99.8%. This study indicated that both a higher media grain size and the presence of earthworms have a small effect on the removal efficiency of MPs in VFCWs, but the effect on the distribution of MPs was considerably. Longer-term studies in full-scale CWs are advised to perform under the influence of more practical factors.

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