posted on 2024-06-18, 17:38authored byAlexander
H. Brown, Margaret C. Hoffman, Lauren Elyse McPhillips
Sodium chloride (NaCl) deicers contaminate bioretention
and influence
effluent water quality, the effects of which are not yet fully understood.
We tested this by constructing 48 mesocosms in a greenhouse, each
having Panicum virgatum, Eutrochium purpureum, or no vegetation; having an internal water storage (IWS) zone or
not; and being exposed to high or low NaCl doses in the late winters
of 2022 and 2023. Synthetic stormwater was applied and effluent was
monitored through May 2023 with an end-of-experiment analysis of soil
and plant biomass for nitrogen, phosphorus, copper, zinc, and total
suspended solids (TSS). Average effluent loads increased in spring,
after NaCl application, for total phosphorus (+61%), copper (+61%),
zinc (+88%), and TSS (+66%). These four analytes recovered by summer,
with average annual percent removals >85%. Vegetation and IWS reduced
annual phosphorus (by −33 and −70%, respectively) and
copper (by −24 and −40%) loads, while higher NaCl concentrations
increased annual phosphorus (+107%), copper (+22%), and TSS (+51%)
loads. Nitrogen removal was not linked with NaCl but was dependent
upon the presence of IWS or vegetation. Post-NaCl effluent spikes
pose seasonal risks to aquatic ecosystems, emphasizing the need for
active maintenance, redundant removal mechanisms, and minimized exposure
to NaCl.