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Dep. of Soil and Water Sci., Shantz Bldg. no. 38, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721;
Elect. Power Res. Inst., 2000 L St. NW, Suite 805, Washington, DC 20036.
* Corresponding author (csalo{at}ag.arizona.edu).
ABSTRACT
Codisposing saline wastewater from electrical generating stations with flue gas desulfurization (FGD) scrubber sludge simplifies waste disposal but produces a saline waste that will later require revegetation. This waste is low in macronutrients, contains high levels of salts and B, and has a fine texture. This study identified plants, based on germination test results, that show promise for sowing at an evaporation pond in eastern Arizona where scrubber sludge and wastewater are codisposed. Forty-four grass, forb, and shrub accessions germinated on filter paper in saline water from the disposal pond. Dilutions of disposal pond water with untreated well water from the site ranged in EC from 0.17 to 3.03 S m–1. Our criteria for evaluating plants to be used in revegetating saline FGD sludge were: (i) ability to germinate in increasing levels of disposal pond water and (ii) ease of establishment from seed. The percentage of pond water that would reduce germination to 50% that of well-water controls (P50) ranged as high as >100 for the most tolerant plants. Accessions that show promise for sowing at these types of saline waste disposal sites include: Elytrigia pontica Jose and Largo, Atriplex gardneri, Puccinellia airoides, P. distans Fults, Festuca arundinacea Alta and Fawn, Krascheninnikovia lanata, Kochia prostrata Immigrant, Panicum virgatum Nebraska 28, Sporobolus airoides Saltalk, Leymus angustus Praireland and Elymus trachycaulus Pryor.
Contribution from the Dep. of Soil and Water Sci., Univ. of Arizona, Tucson.
Received for publication August 14, 1995.
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