OLIVEIRA, A. C. A.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7330066566072476; OLIVEIRA, Ana Cleide Arrais de.
Abstract:
The processing of wastewater, mainly for irrigation, promotes the saving of good
quality water that can be useful for more noble purposes, besides preventing
sewage from being released in the receiving bodies. The nutrients restrained in
these waters can be employed as fertilizers for the cultures, resulting into great
economic advantage. The irrigated agriculture, through the use of wastewaters, is
an asserted need, because it is a safe and a sanitary option, economically feasible
and environmentally sustained, particularly in the northeastern semiarid, where the
irregular distribution of rains restricts the country-man's agricultural activities for
domestic consumption. The wetlands are artificial systems designed by man, which
apply the basic criteria of the natural wetlands system. Among these ecosystems'
essential elements, the substrate is found, the biofilm formed by bacteria, fungi and
metazoans, responsible for important mechanisms of pollutant removal, the aquatic
macrophytes and the roots' zone or rhizosphere, and also the hydraulical flow. This
work aims at studying the effectiveness of the treatment by means of wetlands of
subsurface flow, with a hydraulical detention time of 10 days, from domestic
sewage's contaminated water and its application in the production of useful
cultures for man. Eighteen beds (asbestos cement tanks) with sand and crushed
stone substrates have been settled. The applied emergent macrophytes species
have been rice (Oryza sativa) and Typha spp. The planted wetlands themselves
have been compared as well as with witness tanks, bearing only sand and crushed
stone. In all treatments, the nitrogen removal has been observed (varying from 50
to 90%), also the removal of organic matter (varying from 77 to 89%) and of fecal
bacteria (varying from 98.78 to 99.92%). There was an excellent growth of rice and
Typha spp. The results have disclosed that the wetlands are an efficient choice for
the treatment of domestic sewage's contaminated water and for the reuse of its
final effluent.