Journal article
Authors list: Fey, A; Benckiser, G; Ottow, JCG
Publication year: 1999
Pages: 354-359
Journal: Biology and Fertility of Soils
Volume number: 29
Issue number: 4
ISSN: 0178-2762
eISSN: 1432-0789
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003740050565
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
In less populated rural areas constructed wetlands with a groundfilter made out of the local soil mixed with peat and planted with common reed (Phragmites australis) are increasingly used to purify waste water. Particularly in the rhizosphere of the reed, nitrification and denitrification processes take place varying locally and temporally, and the question arises to what extent this type of waste-water treatment plant may contribute to the release of N2O. In situ N2O measurements were carried out in the two reed beds of the Friedelhausen dairy farm, Hesse, Germany, irrigated with the waste water from a cheese dairy and 70 local inhabitants (12 m(3) waste water or 6 kg BOD5 or 11 kg chemical O-2 demand (CODMn) day(-1)). During November 1995 to March 1996, the release of N2O was measured weekly at Im distances using eight open chambers and molecular-sieve traps to collect and absorb the emitted N2O. Simultanously, the N2O trapped in the soil, the soil temperature, as well as the concentrations of NH4+-N, NO3--N, NO2--N, water-soluble C and the pH were determined at depths of 0-20, 20-40 and 40-60 cm. In the waste water from the in- and outflow the concentrations of CODMn, BOD5, NH4+-N, NO3--N, NO2--N, as well as the pH, were determined weekly. Highly varying amounts of N2O were emitted at all measuring dates during the winter. Even at soil temperatures of -1.5 degrees C in 10 cm depth of soil or 2 degrees C at a depth of 50 cm, N2O was released. The highest organic matter and N transformation rates were recorded in the upper 20 cm of soil and in the region closest to the outflow of the constructed wetland. Not until a freezing period of several weeks did the N2O emissions drop drastically. During the period of decreasing temperatures less NO3--N was formed in the soil, but the NH4+-N concentrations increased. On average the constructed wetlands of Friedelhausen emitted about 15 mg N2O-N inhabitant equivalent(-1) day(-1) during the winter period. Nitrification-denitrification processes rather than heterotrophic denitrification are assumed to be responsible for the N2O production.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Fey, A., Benckiser, G. and Ottow, J. (1999) Emissions of nitrous oxide from a constructed wetland using a groundfilter and macrophytes in waste-water purification of a dairy farm, Biology and Fertility of Soils, 29(4), pp. 354-359. https://doi.org/10.1007/s003740050565
APA Citation style: Fey, A., Benckiser, G., & Ottow, J. (1999). Emissions of nitrous oxide from a constructed wetland using a groundfilter and macrophytes in waste-water purification of a dairy farm. Biology and Fertility of Soils. 29(4), 354-359. https://doi.org/10.1007/s003740050565
Keywords
CONSTRUCTED WETLANDS; Phragmites australis; reed; released and retained nitrous oxide; TREATMENT-PLANT