(Created page with "==Bioretention (Speaker: Andy Erickson)== Bioretention *If you use less compost aren't you dramatically effecting the infiltration rates and potentially increasing runoff or v...") |
m |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==Bioretention (Speaker: Andy Erickson)== | ==Bioretention (Speaker: Andy Erickson)== | ||
− | |||
*If you use less compost aren't you dramatically effecting the infiltration rates and potentially increasing runoff or volume of water that can be stored?¬ | *If you use less compost aren't you dramatically effecting the infiltration rates and potentially increasing runoff or volume of water that can be stored?¬ | ||
**In most cases, no, because healthy vegetation will provide macropores and keep the top surface from becoming clogged up with accumulated sediment. Compost and organic matter actually hold water, not necessarily promote infiltration. As long as there is enough compost/organic matter to support the vegetation, the infiltration capacity should be maintained. | **In most cases, no, because healthy vegetation will provide macropores and keep the top surface from becoming clogged up with accumulated sediment. Compost and organic matter actually hold water, not necessarily promote infiltration. As long as there is enough compost/organic matter to support the vegetation, the infiltration capacity should be maintained. | ||
Line 25: | Line 24: | ||
**Erickson, A.J., J.S. Gulliver, P.T. Weiss and W.A. Arnold. (2014). Enhanced Filter Media for Removal of Dissolved Contaminants from Stormwater. SAFL Project Report No. 572, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, September 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11299/166940. | **Erickson, A.J., J.S. Gulliver, P.T. Weiss and W.A. Arnold. (2014). Enhanced Filter Media for Removal of Dissolved Contaminants from Stormwater. SAFL Project Report No. 572, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, September 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11299/166940. | ||
**http://www.shinglecreek.org/biochar-filters.html | **http://www.shinglecreek.org/biochar-filters.html | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Sweeping and leaf litter (Speaker: Sarah Hobbie)== | ||
+ | *Can the high-efficiency regenerative air machine be used solely for pick-up of high leaf litter or does it need to be combined with a mechanical brush sweeper?¬ | ||
+ | **In our Prior Lake study, we used a regenerative air sweeper on its own for leaf pickup. | ||
+ | *To MPCA and presenters: What does the stormwater city of the future look like? How do we take these ideas to scale in a cost effective way? | ||
+ | **We need to somehow close the P cycle. Currently trees are putting more P into the drainage system. We need to figure out how to harvest and use the P instead of washing it into our surface water systems. Upfront activities (P2 practices) are very effective ways to harvest this P. | ||
+ | *Have there been studies done comparing the negative impacts of operating equipment for sweeping (carbon emissions) vs. the benefit of P removal? | ||
+ | **We have not looked at this but it should be a relatively easy analysis to determine the significance of this trade-off | ||
+ | *Have staff hours been considered in the cost of sweeping? | ||
+ | **Yes | ||
+ | *Are communities coordinating their water system and hydrant flushing process with their Fall tree litter removal? Each Fall we find lots of leaves are washed down drains due to the difficulty of coordinating these two activities. | ||
+ | **We aren’t aware of specific coordination efforts but many cities seem to flush their hydrants in summer when leaf issues are less of a concern. | ||
+ | *Have any communities that do dedicated leaf pick-up (versus regular sweeping) been considered? E.g., East Lansing does leaf pick-up like you just mentioned......with blowers, vactor trucks, front-end loaders, and dumptrucks... | ||
+ | **The study that was done in Madison, WI, by Bill Selbig, was done with a combination of leaf removal vehicles, plows, dumptrucks, and vacuum-assisted street cleaners. They compared the stormwater runoff phosphorus in a small catchment cleaned that way with a catchment that didn’t receive any leaf removal. reduced phosphorus load in storm water runoff by more than 45% in the spring and more than 80% in the fall. You can find Bill Selbig’s publications here. https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/william-r-selbig?qt-staff_profile_science_products=0#qt-staff_profile_science_products | ||
+ | *Has your P loading model been tested for transferability? In other words, the 5-fold cross-validation wporked well in your study areas but have you tested it in other areas with different tree characteristics (species, density, etc)? | ||
+ | **No but this would be a great next step | ||
+ | *Interesting to note that your volunteers had shovels - not brooms. Shoveling the gutter looks very different than sweeping the street. | ||
+ | **The appropriate tools will depend on how wet the leaf litter is. When things are really wet, and the leaf material is matted, shovels can work better than rakes or brooms. When things are dryer, rakes and brooms work better. | ||
+ | *Any urban "forestry" comprehensive planning guidelines to minimize P loading? | ||
+ | **We’ve done studies looking at different factors that might affect P loading, such as species and tree density. The most important factor seems to be size of the trees (i.e. tree canopy cover). Another issue is that different species drop leaves at different times of the year, so planning for this seems appropriate. For example, plant one species on a block and another on another block to create diversity but enhance sweeping efficiency. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Other questions== | ||
+ | *What is the URL of the calculator? | ||
+ | **https://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php?title=Methods_for_calculating_pollutant_reductions_for_street_sweeping | ||
+ | *Which manual are you referencing? | ||
+ | **Minnesota Stormwater Manual | ||
+ | *Have we looked into what our agricultural partners are doing for phosphorous and applying to construction stormwater | ||
+ | **No, but something we could pursue | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Level 3 - General information, reference, tables, images, and archives/Reference/Training, webinars, and workshops]] |
This page was last edited on 6 December 2022, at 14:28.