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Contrasting two urban wetland parks created for improving habitat and downstream water quality.

Authors :
Mitsch, William J.
Zhang, Li
Griffiths, Lauren N.
Bays, James
Source :
Ecological Engineering. Jul2023, Vol. 192, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

This paper describes the ecology and management of two flow-through created wetlands that, in turn, defined 30 years of research by Bill Mitsch, 20 years in Columbus, Ohio (1992–2012) and 10 years in Naples, Florida (2012−2022). The Olentangy River Wetland Research Park was built in several stages from 1993 through 2010. The first stage was the creation of dual 1-ha kidney-shaped wetlands primarily fed by pumped Olentangy River water. A pattern of inflow that depended on river stage was maintained for 17 years. The two experimental wetlands were established by planting one of the wetlands with a variety of wetland macrophytes and leaving the second wetland unplanted to ultimately determine whether human introduction of wetland plants matter in the long run. In addition to maintaining data collection for hydrology, water quality, and other functions, these wetlands and several others constructed on the 20-ha floodplain site were heavily used as was the mesocosm compound, mostly for short-term (2 to 3 year) experiments by graduate students. Another 20-ha created wetland complex, called Freedom Park Wetlands, was constructed in 2007–2008 in Naples, Florida, at an abandoned citrus grove, to seasonally treat urban stormwater runoff. During that wet season, the design calls for an average water detention time of 18 days. The wetland system included a 1.9-ha deepwater pond for temporary storage of the urban stormwater pulses from what is mostly an urban watershed, followed by 2.7 ha of shallower vegetated wetland ponds designed to sequentially improve water quality. Within each wetland, there are three deep-water cells and two shallow-water cells. The water eventually exits the treatment wetlands via a rectangular and travels diffusely through a restored bottomland forest to the Gordon River and ultimately toward Naples Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. During our tenure at Florida Gulf Coast University's (FGCU) Everglades Wetland Research Park, Freedom Park was a venue with active mesocosm experiments in a constructed mesocosm compound. Several of these mesocosm experiments were the subjects of master's theses from FGCU and doctoral dissertations from our partner, University of South Florida. Our students also contributed to the local environmental communities by giving tours of the Freedom Park wetlands and our mesocosm research. • This paper describes the ecology and management of two created wetlands. • The Olentangy River Wetland Research Park in Ohio, USA has provided data since 1994. • The Freedom Park wetlands in Florida, USA were constructed in 2007–2008. • Both wetlands offer ecosystem services (i.e. nutrient reduction and flood protection). • These wetlands provide the framework for thirty years of wetlands research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09258574
Volume :
192
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Ecological Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163615152
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2023.106976