Evaluating the performance of a retrofitted stormwater wet pond for treatment of urban runoff

被引:0
|
作者
Daniel Schwartz
David J. Sample
Thomas J. Grizzard
机构
[1] Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University,Occoquan Watershed Monitoring Laboratory, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[2] Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University,Department of Biological Systems Engineering
来源
关键词
Retention pond; Retrofit; TMDL; Performance monitoring; Nutrients; Sediment;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper describes the performance of a retrofitted stormwater retention pond (Ashby Pond) in Northern Virginia, USA. Retrofitting is a common practice which involves modifying existing structures and/or urban landscapes to improve water quality treatment, often compromising standards to meet budgetary and site constraints. Ashby Pond is located in a highly developed headwater watershed of the Potomac River and the Chesapeake Bay. A total maximum daily load (TMDL) was imposed on the Bay watershed by the US Environmental Protection Agency in 2010 due to excessive sediment and nutrient loadings leading to eutrophication of the estuary. As a result of the TMDL, reducing nutrient and sediment discharged loads has become the key objective of many stormwater programs in the Bay watershed. The Ashby Pond retrofit project included dredging of accumulated sediment to increase storage, construction of an outlet structure to control flows, and repairs to the dam. Due to space limitations, pond volume was less than ideal. Despite this shortcoming, Ashby Pond provided statistically significant reductions of phosphorus, nitrogen, and suspended sediments. Compared to the treatment credited to retention ponds built to current state standards, the retrofitted pond provided less phosphorus but more nitrogen reduction. Retrofitting the existing stock of ponds in a watershed to at least partially meet current design standards could be a straightforward way for communities to attain downstream water quality goals, as these improvements represent reductions in baseline loads, whereas new ponds in new urban developments simply limit future load increases or maintain the status quo.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Assessing the performance of sand filter basins in treating urban stormwater runoff
    Vahid Zarezadeh
    Travis Lung
    Troy Dorman
    Heather J. Shipley
    Marcio Giacomoni
    Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2018, 190
  • [22] Exploring hydrobiogeochemical processes of floating treatment wetlands in a subtropical stormwater wet detention pond
    Chang, Ni-Bin
    Xuan, Zhemin
    Marimon, Zachary
    Islam, Kamrul
    Wanielista, Martin P.
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2013, 54 : 66 - 76
  • [23] Design and operation of an aerobic biological filter for the treatment of urban stormwater runoff
    Anderson, B.C.
    Caldwell, R.J.
    Crowder, A.A.
    Marsalek, J.
    Watt, W.E.
    Water Quality Research Journal of Canada, 1997, 32 (01): : 119 - 137
  • [24] System dynamics modeling with sensitivity analysis for floating treatment wetlands in a stormwater wet pond
    Marimon, Zachary A.
    Xuan, Zhemin
    Chang, Ni-Bin
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2013, 267 : 66 - 79
  • [25] Reduction of Stormwater Runoff Toxicity by Wet Detention Ponds
    Wium-Andersen, Tove
    Nielsen, Asbjorn H.
    Hvitved-Jacobsen, Thorkild
    Vollertsen, Jes
    HIGHWAY AND URBAN ENVIRONMENT, 2010, 17 : 169 - 176
  • [26] Wet season nitrogen export from a residential stormwater pond
    Jani, Jariani
    Lusk, Mary G.
    Yang, Yun-Ya
    Toor, Gurpal S.
    PLOS ONE, 2020, 15 (04):
  • [27] Performance evaluation and a sizing method for hydrodynamic separators treating urban stormwater runoff
    Lee, D. H.
    Min, K. S.
    Kang, J. -H.
    WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2014, 69 (10) : 2122 - 2131
  • [28] Urban stormwater runoff limits distribution of platypus
    Martin, Elizabeth H.
    Walsh, Christopher J.
    Serena, Melody
    Webb, J. Angus
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2014, 39 (03) : 337 - 345
  • [29] Live diatoms as indicators of urban stormwater runoff
    Gillett, Nadia D.
    Oudsema, Maggie E.
    Steinman, Alan D.
    ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT, 2017, 189 (01)
  • [30] Floating treatment wetland retrofit in a stormwater wet pond provides limited water quality improvements
    Maxwell, Bryan
    Winter, Danielle
    Birgand, Francois
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2020, 149