Abstract
Nitrogen is a pollutant of great concern when present in excess in surface waters. Living wall biofiltration systems that employ ornamentals and climbing plants are an emerging green technology that has recently demonstrated significant potential to reduce nitrogen concentrations from greywater before outdoor domestic re-use. However, there still exists a paucity of knowledge around the mechanisms governing this removal, particularly in regards to the fate of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) within these systems. Understanding the fate of nitrogen in living wall treatment systems is imperative both to optimise designs and to predict the long-term viability of these systems, more so given the growing interest in adopting green infrastructure within urban cities. A laboratory study was undertaken to investigate the transformation and fate of nitrogen in biofilters planted with different climbing plants and ornamental species. An isotropic tracer (15N-urea) was applied to quantify the amount removed through coupled nitrification-denitrification. The results found that nitrification-denitrification formed a minor removal pathway in planted systems, comprising only 0–15% of added 15N. DON and ammonium were effectively reduced by all biofilter designs, indicating effective mineralisation and nitrification rates. However, in designs with poor nitrogen removal, the effluent was enriched with nitrate, suggesting limited denitrification rates. Given the likely dominance of plant assimilation in removal, this indicates that plant selection is a critical design parameter, as is maintaining healthy plant growth for optimal nitrogen removal in greywater living wall biofilters in their early years of operation.
Highlights
Nutrient management remains one of the most challenging environmental problems
The extent of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) removal via the biological process of nitrification-denitrification in greywater living wall biofilters were for the first time examined
The results indicate that nitrification-denitrification increases after plant nutrient demand is satisfied
Summary
Nutrient management remains one of the most challenging environmental problems. The presence of excess nutrients impacts negatively on the ecological health of our aquatic ecosystems through promotion of eutrophication, oxygen depletion, death of aquatic life, and loss of biodiversity [1]. This, in turn, has deleterious influences on human health and economy [2]. Greywater is increasingly being considered as a viable alternative water source for non-potable water re-use because it is consistently generated in large volumes close to demand. It contains nutrients at concentrations that present a health threat to aquatic ecosystems [3,4]. This is applicable in all instances where the greywater is re-used for outdoor applications.
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