Characterization of earthworms in an infiltration basin for maintaining water infiltration

Author(s):  
Jean-Phillipe Bedell ◽  
Gersende Fernandes ◽  
Olivier Roques ◽  
Laurent Lassabatere

<p>Infiltration basins are among the most spread techniques for managing stormwater. Infiltration basins allow the infiltration of stormwater, which prevents their piping towards treatment systems. However, stormwater contains loads of pollutants and suspended solids that accumulate at the surface of the basin and form a sedimentary layer. That sedimentary lay may clog the infiltration basin partially, thus reducing its bulk infiltration capability. Fortunately, plants and fauna colonize spontaneously this sedimentary layer, thus preventing complete clogging and restoring soils' infiltration functions. The knowledge of the effect on restoring the infiltration function requires properly characterize fauna, notably earthworms, with the aim to predict their impact on infiltration. Besides, earthworms, considered as ecosystem engineers, are known to be good candidates for integrating soil chemical pollution.</p><p>If earthworms have been intensively studied in natural and agricultural soil, very few studies have focused on the characterization of earthworms' communities in urban soils and, in particular, in infiltration basins. This study presents the description of earthworms sampled at several places over one infiltration basins. This basin receives the stormwater collected over an industrial peri-urban catchment. The infiltration basin has been functioning for more than two decades, thus, plants and fauna have colonized the surface related to water ponding at surface and water infiltration. The sampled places were selected to follow three specific water pathways at the surface. High population variability was measured with densities ranging from 0 to 300 earthworms per square meter with the presence of adults but also juveniles. But, only endogenic and epigeic functional groups were found. The characterization of abundance, age, and species over the sampled places was correlated to water content and sediment thickness, in addition to pollutant loads.</p><p>The results show that earthworms require given edaphic conditions (including thick enough sedimentary layer) to settle. We then expect most earthworms to colonize those specific places, increasing water infiltration punctually at these places. Put all together, our findings participate in the understanding of colonization of basin infiltration by organisms and their contribution to their primary function: infiltrating water.</p>

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 26
Author(s):  
Kapso Tchouankep Mireille ◽  
Ajeagah Gideon Aghaindum ◽  
Nkeng George Elambo ◽  
Ngassam Pierre

A study was carried in Yaounde to evaluate the level of organic pollution in the surface water and to determine the distribution of pathogenic free living amoeba in the aquatic ecosystem. Six points were selected on the Olezoa and the Abiergue streams of Yaounde for our study. Physico-chemical pollution was carried out by standard methods of assessment. The parameters measured were suspended solids, electric conductivity, pH, TDS, Oxydability, BOD5, COD, humidity, Dissolved Oxygen. The free living amoeba were identified by direct observation on microscope and observation after culture on Non Nutritive Agar (NNA)and Page’s Agar Saline Solution (PAS) which are all enriched with Escherichia coli. The data obtained reveal a high pollution of these urban streams of the Mfoundi River system and presents a high densities of telluric amoebae such as Acanthamoeba (21 Cell./L), Balamuthia (11 Cell./L), Naegleria (6 Cell./L), Vanella (17 Cell./L) and Vermamoeba (5 Cell./L). The sizes vary between 12 to 94 μm for the different forms isolated and identified in our study. The presence of amoeba are significantly correlated with hydrometry, temperature, nitrates suspended solids, COD and BOD5 (p <0.001). These organisms in water show contamination of the groundwater by wastewater during the study period.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chem Int

Liquid effluents discharged by hospitals may contain chemical and biological contaminants whose main source is the different substances used for the treatment of patients. This type of rejection can present a sanitary potentially dangerous risk for human health and can provoke a strong degradation of diverse environmental compartments mainly water and soils. The present study focuses on the quality of the liquid effluents of Hassani Abdelkader’s hospital of Sidi Bel-Abbes (West of Algeria). The results reveal a significant chemical pollution (COD: 879 mgO2/L, BOD5: 850 mgO2/L, NH4+ : 47.9 mg/l, NO2- : 4.2 mg/l, NO3- : 56.8 mg/l with respect to WHO standard of 90 mgO2/L, 30 mgO2/L, 0.5 mg/l, 1 mg/l and 1 mg/l respectively). However, these effluents are biodegradable since the ratio COD/BOD5 do not exceeded the value of 2 in almost all samples. The presence of pathogen germs is put into evidence such as pseudomonas, the clostridium, the staphylococcus, the fecal coliforms and fecal streptococcus. These results show that the direct discharge of these effluents constitutes a major threat to human health and the environment.


1992 ◽  
Vol 26 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 377-386 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Çeçen

Laboratory-scale physicochemical and biological treatability studies were performed on wastewaters discharged from an industry producing household and heavy-duty detergents of powder and liquid type. The characterization of effluents led to the conclusion that the industry was highly pollutant in terms of BOD5, COD, surfactant, phosphorus, oil-grease, suspended solids and pH. By the use of lime in the precipitation stage about 80 % of COD and more than 90 % of phosphorus and anionic surface active agents could be removed. Following the treatment with lime the biodegradation of these wastewaters was investigated in continuously fed activated sludge units. The biokinetic constants of the reaction were determined as k = 0.76 d−1, Ks = 972 mg/l COD, a = 0.58 mg O2/mg COD, b = 0.044 mg O2/mg MLVSS.d. The experimental findings were used in the design of a full-scale treatment system.


2018 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 293-296
Author(s):  
Gulnara R. Khanturina ◽  
Z. I. Namazbaeva ◽  
G. S. Zhumabekova ◽  
G. Zh. Seitkasymova ◽  
I. A. Fedorova

Adverse climatic and anthropogenic factors can affect the health of people living near the dried-up Aral Sea. There was modified the comprehensive assessment of inorganic chemical pollution of the environment of the village in the Zhosaly Kyzylorda region of Kazakhstan. The comprehensive assessment score included 5 categories: satisfactory, intense, critical, crisis, catastrophic. According to own research over 2014-2015 based on the mentioned assessment score, the comprehensive assessment score amounted to 41 points and showed a critical situation. In the air, there was observed the phenol content of 1.02 MAC, suspended solids - 0.5 MAC. The main part of the fine suspended solids sized of 1.5-2.5 mm, round shape, was formed in the process of condensation and evaporation of the sea and the Syr Darya River. In the dust, there was found the excess in silicon content of 2.8 MAC, iron - 1.3 MAC, zinc 1.1 MAC. As soil pollutants, there were detected sulfates - of 173.5 MAC, chlorides - 9.0 MAC, mercury - 0.56 MAC, nickel - 0.49 MAC. In drinking water, there was revealed cadmium excess of 1.3 MAC, nickel - 1.2 MAC, chlorides - 1.25 MPC, sulfates - 1.0 MAC. In the water of the Syr Darya River, there was revealed an excess in nickel - of 2.2 MAC, sulfates - 1.8 MAC, dissolved oxygen - 2.0 MAC. In the sediments of the Syr Darya river, the sulfate content accounted for 3.36 MAC and chlorides - 1.53 MAC. In the snow cover there was revealed an excess of manganese - 5.14MPC, chromium - 2.04 MAC, zinc - 1.2 MAC. In a critical situation a significant portion (30-50%) of the population may be in a state of exertion and adaptation surge, and the most susceptible part seems to be in a state of adaptation failure, characterized by an increase in incidence rate.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (17) ◽  
pp. 7196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salvatore Falco ◽  
Giuseppe Brunetti ◽  
Giovanna Grossi ◽  
Mario Maiolo ◽  
Michele Turco ◽  
...  

At the outlet of the Vermicelli catchment—a peri-urban area located in the campus of University of Calabria (Cosenza, Southern Italy)—a sedimentation tank is located, aiming at collecting the basin surface runoff and improve its quality. First, experimental results of the treatment effects are here presented and analyzed. In addition, a monitoring campaign was conducted in order to characterize the particles transported by surface runoff and to determine the treatment efficiency of the tank. The analysis showed the presence of a pollutant load in the surface runoff of the Vermicelli basin and provided information on its particle-size distribution (PSD). Results were considered in terms of the treatment efficiency of the sedimentation tank, showing a good overall removal efficiency value, together with a high variability of the removal sedimentation efficiency. This variability is mainly due to the different grain size of the suspended solids and the characteristics of the rainfall event.


2001 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 119-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. Bardin ◽  
A. Gautier ◽  
S. Barraud ◽  
B. Chocat

In the south-east of France, the evacuation of stormwater by infiltration into the ground is being developed for large aquifer systems such as the ground water in the Rhône valley and in the eastern part of Lyons. A study proposal has been presented to the water management department of the conurbation of Lyons, aimed at quantifying, within a reasonably short space of time, the effects, in terms of transport of pollutants, of the stormwater infiltration system in the underground water in eastern Lyons. To this end, a one year duration experiment was carried out on the Vénissieux infiltration basin which drains stormwater from a 380 hectares industrial catchment area. Its peculiar configuration also made it possible to acquire new knowledge on the qualitative operation of a few pretreatment facilities. After describing the operation of the basin and the experimental protocol, we shall present a body of data that we monitored and our conclusions about the behaviour of the pollution throughout the facilities. Then, we present methods used to assess the pollution removal performance of the infiltration basin and its pretreatment devices, the results obtained, and our conclusions about the impact of the infiltration basin on groundwater and soil.


1975 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 281-284
Author(s):  
WAYNE A. BOUGH

Characterization of waste loads from unit processes in a commercial potato canning operation revealed that the lye peeler and reel washer which removed the peel accounted for approximately 95% of the total load of total solids, suspended solids, volatile solids, COD, and BOD, and for 46% of the total wastewater flow. The total loads of suspended solids, COD, BOD, and wastewater from this relatively large plant were 65.2 lb/ton, 88.4 lb/ton, 54.7 lb/ton, and 2,950 gal/ton of raw product processed respectively. The BOD and wastewater loads from this plant were significantly less than those reported previously for a smaller operation. Results on unit waste loads serve to better define the standard raw waste load from potato canning as the sum of the unit processes.


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