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Soil Aquifer Treatment (SAT) and Constructed Wetlands (CW) Applications for Nutrients and Organic Micropollutants (OMPs) Attenuation Using Primary and Secondary Wastewater EffluentsHamadeh, Ahmed F. 06 1900 (has links)
Constructed wetlands (CW) and soil aquifer treatment (SAT) represent natural
wastewater treatment systems (NWTSs). The high costs of conventional
wastewater treatment techniques encourage more studies to investigate lower cost
treatment methods which make these appropriate for developing and also in
developed countries.
The main objective of this research was to investigate the removals of
nutrients and organic micropollutants (OMPs) through SAT, CW and the
CW-SAT hybrid system.
CWs are an efficient technology to purify and remove different nutrients as well as
OMPs from wastewater. They removed most of the dissolved organic matter
(DOC), total nitrogen (TN), ammonium and phosphate. Furthermore, CWs
aeration could be used as one of the alternatives to reduce CWs footprint by around
10%. The vegetation in CWs plays an essential role in the treatment especially for
nitrogen and phosphate removals, it is responsible for the removal of 15%, 55%,
38%, and 22% for TN, dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), nitrate and phosphate,
respectively. CWs achieved a very high removal for some OMPs; they attenuated
acetaminophen, caffeine, fluoxetine and trimethoprim (>90%) under different
redox conditions. Moreover, it was found that increasing temperature (up to 36 C)
could enhance the removals of atenolol, caffeine, DEET and trimethoprim by 17%,
14%, 28% and 45%, respectively. On the other hand, some OMPs, were found to
be removed by vegetation such as: acetaminophen, caffeine, fluoxetine,
sulfamethoxazole, and trimethoprim. Moreover, atenolol, caffeine, fluoxetine and
trimethoprim, showed high removal (>80%) through SAT system. It was also
found that, temperature increasing and using primary instead of secondary effluent
could enhance the removal of some OMPs.
The CWs performance study showed that these systems are adapted to the
prevailing extreme arid conditions and the average percent removals are about,
88%, 96%, 98%, 98% and 92%, for COD, BOD and TSS, ammonium and
phosphate, respectively.
Additionally, the natural hybrid system (CW-SAT) can provide an effective
treatment technology of reclaimed water for replenishing aquifers and subsequent
reuse. This hybrid system embodied the performance advantages of both processes
and exhibits a high potential for removal of OMPs, nutrients, metals as well as
pathogens, bacteria and viruses.
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Caractérisation d'une hybridation naturelle entre Schistosoma haematobium et Schistosoma guineensis au Gabon / Characterization of a natural hybridation between Schistosoma Haematobium and Schistosoma Guineensis in GabonMengue Me Ngou Milama, Krystina 27 March 2013 (has links)
La plupart des études sur l’hybride naturel entre Schistosoma haematobium (S.) et S. guineensis sont réalisées sur les vers adultes et contrairement aux études expérimentales sur l’hybridation, on ne retrouve pas de vers adultes hybrides après analyse de leur ADN. Avec cette étude, nous souhaitons mettre en évidence la présence d’hybride naturel entre ces deux espèces au Gabon à partir du premier élément suspect : l’œuf. Nous avons suivi l’œuf de son observation morphologique, à sa coloration par la technique de Ziehl-Neelsen jusqu’à l’amplification par PCR de son ADN et on a pu montrer qu’un œuf de morphologie suspecte observé dans les urines est capable d’amplifier à la fois une région spécifique de S. haematobium et de S. guineensis. / Most studies on the natural hybrid between Schistosoma haematobium (S.) and S.guineensis are performed on adult worms and contrary to experimental studies of hybridization, we do not find an adult hybrid worm after analysis of their DNA. With this study, we wish to highlight the presence of a natural hybrid between these two species in Gabon from the first suspect element: the egg. We followed the egg from its morphological observation to its staining using Ziehl-Neelsen technique until PCR amplification of its DNA and it has been shown that a suspected egg morphology seen in the urine is able to amplify both a specific region of S. haematobium and S. guineensis.
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