[Bioremediation of river water quality by consecutively adjustable submerged vegetation net].
Mots clés
Abstrait
A series of consecutively adjustable submerged vegetation nets were constructed in a polluted shallow river with a length of about 200 m and nearby the water resource protection area of Taihu Lake in East China, forming an aquatic vegetation consisted of submerged plant species Cabomba caroliniana, Vallisneria natans, Elodea nuttallii, Hydrilla verticillata, and Potamogeton crispus. The water quality indices including total nitrogen (TN), ammonium nitrogen (NH4(+)-N), nitrite nitrogen (NO2(-)-N), nitrate nitrogen (NO3(-)-N), total phosphorus (TP), and phosphate (PO4(3-)-P) were monitored, and the bioremediation effect of the vegetation nets was evaluated. After setting up the vegetation nets, the Secchi depth (SD) of the river changed from 0.5 m to 1.7-1.8 m, and the TN and TP concentrations 15 and 20 days after the nets constructed decreased by 35.6% and 66.3%, and 29.4% and 63.2%, respectively. After five months, the concentrations of NH4(+)-N, NO2(-)-N, NO3(-)-N, TN, TP, and PO4(3-)-P decreased by 92.4%, 76.8%, 72.7%, 73.9%, 90.5%, and 92.0%, respectively. This study showed that consecutively adjustable submerged vegetation net could be a potential approach for treating polluted river waters, particularly for the bioremediation of polluted small landscape shallow water bodies.