Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 12 OF 14

Main Title Techniques to reduce nitrogen in drainage effluent during transport /
Author Williford, John W.,
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Cardon, Doyle.
CORP Author United States. Bureau of Reclamation. Region 2.
Publisher United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Monitoring, Water Quality Office,
Year Published 1971
Report Number EPA-620-R-71-040
OCLC Number 00761074
Subjects Water--Purification ; Nitrogen ; San Joaquin Valley (Calif) ; California--San Joaquin Valley
Internet Access
Description Access URL
https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=9101BEM1.PDF
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EJBD  EPA 620-R-71-040 c.1 Headquarters Library/Washington,DC 05/22/2013
ELBD ARCHIVE EPA 620-R-71-040 Received from HQ AWBERC Library/Cincinnati,OH 10/04/2023
ERAD  EPA 620-R-71-040 Region 9 Library/San Francisco,CA 09/26/2013
Collation ix, 48 pages : illustrations, figures, tables ; 28 cm
Notes
"June 1971." "13030 ELY 6/71-10; REC-R2-71-10; DWR no. 174-13." "The agricultural drainage study was conducted under the direction of: Robert J. Pafford, Paul DeFalco, [and] John R. Terrink." Includes bibliographical references (pages 47-48).
Contents Notes
Three methods to remove nitrates from the agricultural drainage water from the San Luis Service Area in California were investigated. One method was a theoretical evaluation of nitrate removal by algae during the transport of the drainage water in the San Luis Canal or during storage in the Kesterson Reservoir. The other methods were designed to promote anaerobic bacterial denitrification in a continuous flow of drainage water. One method used barley straw and the other water grass grown in shallow ponds as the carbon energy source. Under optimum conditions both of these last two methods reduced the nitrate -N concentration of the drainage water from a maximum of about 30 mg/l to less than 2 mg /l. The cost of nitrogen removal by the shallow grass plot systems, the most economical and feasible method investigated, was estimated.