Water (Jan 2023)

An In-Situ Geotextile Filtration Method for Suspended Solids Attenuation and Algae Suppression in a Canadian Eutrophic Lake

  • Antônio Cavalcante Pereira,
  • Catherine N. Mulligan,
  • Dileep Palakkeel Veetil,
  • Sam Bhat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w15030441
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
p. 441

Abstract

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Climate change and human actions will exacerbate eutrophication cases in inland waters. By external or internal inputs, there will be an increase in nutrient concentrations in those systems worldwide. Those nutrients will bring faster trophic changes to inland waters and possible health and recreational advisories. A novel approach using a floating filtration system, a silt curtain, and geotextiles (woven and non-woven) is under investigation. This method has been applied as an in-situ pilot experiment deployed at Lake Caron, a shallow eutrophic lake in Quebec, for two summers. Turbidity, total suspended solids (TSS), total phosphorus (TP), blue-green-algae-phycocyanin (BGA-PC) and chlorophyll-a showed statistically significant average removal efficiencies of 53%, 22%, 49%, 57% and 56%, respectively, in the first year and 17%, 36%, 18%, 34% and 32% in the second. Statistical correlations were found with TSS, turbidity and variables that could represent particles (TP, turbidity, chlorophyll-a). Employing this in situ management method could be a promising remediation for not only shallow lakes (average depth < 2 m) but also for ponds, rivers, coastal regions, bays and other water types, to enable cleaner water for future generations.

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