Bioretention

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Bioretention Cell, also called a rain garden, in the United States. Designed to treat polluted stormwater runoff from adjacent parking lot. Plants are in winter dormancy
Bioretention Cell, also called a rain garden, in the United States. Designed to treat polluted stormwater runoff from adjacent parking lot. Plants are in winter dormancy

Bioretention is the process of biological removal of contaminants or nutrients as fluid passes through media or a biological system.[1]

This can result in bioaccumulation within an organism and compounded at higher trophic levels of a food web. Alternatively, metabolism and catabolism transform the substance into other substances.

In water treatment, and stormwater management, bioretention by microbes growing within soil or filter media enhance retention and degradation of contaminants from the water.[2] Root surfaces also provide surfaces for biofilm growth from which plants extract nutrients, thus removing them from the filter media. Bioretention cells often refer to chambers where plants grow in the filter media that water flows through. Bioretention areas refer to vegetated areas where soil serves as the filter media. The word retention implies that the substance of concern does not flow out of the soil plant system, regardless of whether surface water flows among plant shoots in a treatment wetland, or infiltrated water is itself detained in rain garden soil from which evapotranspiration may greatly reduce groundwater outflow rates--hence extending contaminant retention times.

Retention of water within the filtration systems need not be absolute in order to achieve treatment. The capacity to detain contaminants can buffer sudden concentration spikes from occurring in the outflow.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ United States Environmental Protection Agency. Washington, DC. "Storm Water Technology Fact Sheet: Bioretention." September 1999. Document No. EPA-832-F-99-012.
  2. ^ Prince George's County Department of Environmental Resources. Largo, MD. "Bioretention Manual." Chapter 1. December 2002.

[edit] External links