Description |
1 online resource : illustrations |
Contents |
Cover; About the Editor; Contents; Acknowledgment and How to Cite; List of Contributors; Introduction; Part I: Developing Countries; Chapter 1: Comparative Study of Three Two-Stage Hybrid Ecological Wastewater Treatment Systems for Producing High Nutrient, Reclaimed Water for Irrigation Reuse in Developing Countries; Chapter 2: Sustainability of Wastewater Treatment and Excess Sludge Handling Practices in the Federated States of Micronesia; Chapter 3: Occurrence and Removal Characteristics of Phthalate Esters from Typical Water Sources in Northeast China |
|
Chapter 4: Assessment of Domestic Wastewater Disposal in Some Selected Wards of Maiduguri Metropolis, Borno State, NigeriaChapter 5: Detection of Free-Living Amoebae Using Amoebal Enrichment in a Wastewater Treatment Plant of Gauteng Province, South Africa; Chapter 6: Water and Wastewater Management and Biomass to Energy Conversion in a Meat Processing Plant in Brazil: A Case Study; Part II: Developed Nations; Chapter 7: Intra- and Inter-Pandemic Variations of Antiviral, Antibiotics and Decongestants in Wastewater Treatment Plants and Receiving Rivers |
|
Chapter 8: Wastewater Recycling in Greece: The Case of ThessalonikiChapter 9: Do Contaminants Originating from State-of-the-Art Treated Wastewater Impact the Ecological Quality of Surface Waters?; Chapter 10: Performance of a Constructed Wetland in Grand Marais, Manitoba, Canada: Removal of Nutrients, Pharmaceuticals, and Antibiotic Resistance Genes from Municipal Wastewater; Chapter 11: Irrigation with Treated Wastewater: Quantification of Changes in Soil Physical and Chemical Properties |
|
Chapter 12: Spatial Distribution of Fecal Indicator Bacteria in Groundwater beneath Two Large On-Site Wastewater Treatment SystemsChapter 13: Detection of Retinoic Acid Receptor Agonistic Activity and Identification of Causative Compounds in Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants in Japan; Author Notes |
Summary |
UN studies show that high-income, developed nations treat about 70 percent of their wastewater. However, in low-income developing nations, only 8 percent of wastewater undergoes any kind of treatment. Inadequate water treatment has serious consequences for both human health and the environment. The articles in this compendium provide a representative cross sample of both developing and developed nations' water treatment facilities. Included are the following topics:Reclaimed water for irrigation reuse in developing countriesSludge-handling practices in MicronesiaThe removal of phthalate esters |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF title page (Ebsco, viewed July 1, 2015) |
Subject |
Sewage -- Purification -- Developed countries
|
|
Sewage -- Purification -- Developing countries
|
|
Water treatment plants -- Developed countries
|
|
Water treatment plants -- Developing countries
|
|
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Environmental -- Watger-Supply.
|
|
Sewage -- Purification
|
|
Water treatment plants
|
|
Developed countries
|
|
Developing countries
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Monsalvo, Victor M., editor.
|
ISBN |
9781771882453 |
|
177188245X |
|