Abstract

Among many disposal options of animal carcasses due to animal diseases including foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) and avian influenza (AI), on-farm burial has been the most frequently used one in Korea. Animal carcasses generate contaminants such as ammonium-N and chloride. This study aimed at testing biochar (BC) as a permeable reactive barrier (PRB) material in combination with fast growing tree species (Populus euramericana) to mitigate groundwater pollution from animal burial sites. For this, a PRB filled with BC was installed and 400 poplar tree (P. euramericana) seedlings were planted. Tested BC was obtained from rice husk and its efficiency to mitigate contaminant migration from a burial site of pig carcasses was tested using ammonium-N, chloride, electrical conductivity (EC), and pH as monitoring parameters. Monitoring wells downstream from the burial site were used. Leachates from a monitoring well, three wells inside the burial site close to PRB and three wells outside the burial site close to PRB were sampled and analyzed for ammonium-N, Cl−, EC, and pH for four years from PRB installation. The pH, EC, and ammonium-N of leachate fluctuated during the test period depending on precipitation. pH, EC, and ammonium-N of the leachate samples collected from outside of the burial site close to PRB decreased compared to those from inside of the burial site close to PRB. The concentrations of ammonium-N in the leachate from the monitoring well kept under the threshold value of 10 mg·L−1 for two years from PRB construction. In addition, the growth of poplar plants appeared to be increased via uptaking available N and P released from the burial sites. Achieved results suggest that BC PRBs can be used to in situ mitigate contaminant release from buried animal carcasses.

Highlights

  • Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) and avian influenza (AI) have frequently occurred in the Republic of Korea (Korea)

  • The present study aimed to investigate the effect of permeable reactive barrier (PRB) filled with rice husk BCs on in situ remediation of leachate and to explore the effect of phytoremediation on soil properties in a pig carcass burial site over 4 years

  • Compared to soil properties near PRB inside of the burial site, higher soil pH but lower electrical conductivity (EC), OM, tinogtal N (TN), TP, and Cl− were detected in soil near PRB outside of the burial site

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Summary

Introduction

Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) and avian influenza (AI) have frequently occurred in the Republic of Korea (Korea). The outbreak of these diseases during 2010 and 2011 occasioned the construction of about 4800 carcass burial sites (4583 for FMD and 216 for AI) in rural Korea. There is a concern regarding the risk of leachate containing high concentrations of contaminants, including ammonium-N (NH4+), nitrate-N (NO3−), chloride (Cl−), and fecal pathogens. These contaminants resulted from carcass decomposition can negatively influence the quality of soil and groundwater around the burial sites [5,6,7]

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