Abstract This report describes investigations which have demonstrated the exceptional utility of artificial wetlands for the removal of nitrate from secondary wastewater effluents at relatively high application rates. The artificial wetlands (14 in number) were plastic-lined excavations containing emergent vegetation growing in gravel. Without supplemental additions of carbon, total nitrogen removal efficiency was low (∼ 25%) in both vegetated and unvegetated beds. When methanol was added to supplement the carbon supply and stimulate bacterial denitrification, the removal efficiency was extremely high (95% removal of total nitrogen at a wastewater application rate of 16.8 cm day−1). Since methanol is a relatively expensive form of carbon, we tested the feasibility of using plant biomass, mulched and applied to the surface of marsh beds, as an alternate source of carbon. At a wastewater application rate of 8.4 cm day−1, the mean total nitrogen removal efficiency for the mulch-amended beds was 86%. When the application rate was higher (16.8 cm day−1) the mean total nitrogen removal efficiency was lower, 60% in the mulch-amended beds. By using plant biomass as a substitute for methanol, the energy savings for a treatment facility serving a small community (3785 m3 day−1 or 1 mgd) would amount to the equivalent of 731 day−1 of methanol. As the cost of fossil fuel increases, energy cost will become a predominant factor in the selection of small (0.5–5 mgd) wastewater treatment systems. However, in many cases where natural wetlands are either geographically unavailable or protected from wastewater discharge by environmental, legal, or aesthetic restraints, artificial wetlands offer a viable alternative for energy-effective treatment of municipal and agricultural wastewater effluents.
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