Journal article
Can raingardens produce food and retain stormwater? Effects of substrates and stormwater application method on plant water use, stormwater retention and yield
Paul J Richards, Nicholas SG Williams, Tim D Fletcher, Claire Farrell
Ecological Engineering | Elsevier | Published : 2017
Abstract
Raingardens capture and filter urban stormwater using sandy soils and drought-tolerant plants. An emerging question is whether raingardens can also be used as vegetable gardens, potentially increasing their popularity and implementation. A successful vegetable raingarden will need to both retain stormwater and produce vegetables, despite potential water deficits between rainfall events. To determine whether raingardens can provide this dual functionality, we undertook a greenhouse pot experiment using two different substrates (loamy sand raingarden substrate and potting mix typical of containerised vegetable growing) and two methods of stormwater application (‘sub-surface’ and ‘surface’ wate..
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Grants
Awarded by ARC Future Fellowship
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was funded by Melbourne Water, under the direction of Keysha Milenkovic. Technical support in the Burnley nursery was provided by Sascha Marianna Andrusiak and Nicholas Osborne. Fletcher was supported by an ARC Future Fellowship (FT100100144).