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Road salt collection and redistribution at an urban rain garden on sandy soil, Gary, Indiana

February 11, 2025

Rain gardens installed as green infrastructure to divert storm runoff from entering combined sewers also collect dissolved constituents and particulates. An urban rain garden in northwestern Indiana, USA, was continuously monitored from November 2019 to May 2021 to evaluate the fate of dissolved constituents entering the rain garden in runoff. Physical and chemical properties of soils in the rain garden were also monitored, along with underlying groundwater. Linear regression models relating specific conductance to chloride concentration indicated that the 0.0371-ha (3998 square feet) rain garden collected approximately 1490 kg (3285 pounds) of road salt from the surrounding 0.2228 ha (24,500 square feet) of impervious surfaces. Soils and groundwater were seasonally affected by road salt application but carryover from year to year was not indicated. Rain garden soil permeability (5.20 × 10−5 to 9.72 × 10−5 m/s) remained unchanged during the study period and soil organic carbon generally increased under native vegetation. The results suggest that a rain garden built on sandy soil can divert substantial quantities of runoff and dissolved constituents from combined sewers; however, chloride is transported to sub-infrastructure groundwater that eventually discharges to adjacent waterways with concentrations lower than those observed in runoff.

Publication Year 2025
Title Road salt collection and redistribution at an urban rain garden on sandy soil, Gary, Indiana
DOI 10.3390/w17040510
Authors E. Randall Bayless, Shawn Naylor, David C. Lampe, Amy A Story, Caleb Colyer Artz
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Water
Index ID 70263918
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Water Science Center
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