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Article Dans Une Revue Ecological Engineering Année : 2008

Vermifiltration as a stage in reuse of swine wastewater: Monitoring methodology on an experimental farm

Résumé

Vermifiltration is a new technology using earthworms to process organically polluted water. A pilot associated with a swine facility (piggery) with 66 swinewas developed to treat diluted manure, produce earthworms and vermicompost, and reduce air pollution. The aim of the experiment reported here was to devise an integrated method – biological, chemical and physical – for further research and development of vermifiltration in diluted swine manure, and provide some preliminary results. The earthworm population increased by 30% in 4 weeks, indicating the acclimation of the earthworms. A reduction in ammonia emission was observed of about 50% for the whole system. Higher water (+100%), carbon (+70%), and total nitrogen (+80%) gaseous losses were observed compared to conventional breeding on a slatted floor. This methodology can be used for further studies to develop vermifiltration for earthworm and vermicompost production from diluted animal manure, without pollution transfer.

Dates et versions

hal-00315861 , version 1 (01-09-2008)

Identifiants

Citer

Yinsheng Li, Paul Robin, Daniel Cluzeau, Marcel Bouché, Jiang Ping Qiu, et al.. Vermifiltration as a stage in reuse of swine wastewater: Monitoring methodology on an experimental farm. Ecological Engineering, 2008, 32 (4), pp.301-309. ⟨10.1016/j.ecoleng.2007.11.010⟩. ⟨hal-00315861⟩
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