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Differences in rhizome aeration of Phragmites australis in a constructed wetland
Authors:Jan DickoppAuthor Vitae,Marian KazdaAuthor VitaeHana ?í  ?ková  Author Vitae
Affiliation:a Institute of Systematic Botany and Ecology, Universität Ulm, Albert-Einstein Allee 11, D-89081 Ulm, Germany
b Faculty of Agriculture, University of South Bohemia, Studentská 13, CZ-37005 ?eské Budějovice, Czech Republic
Abstract:Waterlogged soils are a challenging environment for plants due to anoxic conditions and enrichment of phytotoxic substances in the rhizosphere. High contents of organic matter in the substrate as present in constructed wetlands (CW) may amplify these effects. The influence of substrate organic matter on the rhizome aeration of Phragmites australis (common reed) was investigated in a CW for sewage treatment on two sites with different organic concentrations: (a) inflow part of the bed with a high organic charge (high-organic site) and (b) outflow zone of the bed with a lower organic charge (low-organic site). Several diurnal oxygen (O2) courses were recorded inside the rhizomes using micro-optodes. Maximum O2 percentages in the rhizomes were generally the same at both sites, but minimum O2 values were lower in the low-organic site than in the high-organic site, leading to higher amplitudes at the low-organic site. The results suggest that oxygen release from the roots is hampered under high-organic compared to low-organic conditions. This observation might be explained by changes in gas conductivity of the roots, but also by alterations in microbial oxygen demand, under different organic burden.
Keywords:Oxygen demand   ROL   Organic matter   Eutrophication
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