May-June 2000

Leaving Little Trace With Degradable Erosion Control Solutions

In the realm of rolled erosion control products, completely degradable solutions are gaining ground. More manufacturers are producing them, and on some projects, environmental or safety concerns make them a necessity. More often, however, they are being used in conjunction with more permanent solutions.

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By Janice Kaspersen

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Samson quickly adds that when animals did drag the nonbiodegradable netting, it would tear easily-especially if it had partially photodegraded-quickly freeing the animal as the netting snagged on rocks or vegetation. The litter problem, however, was significant, and crews were sent out to pick up pieces of netting that the animals had dragged out of position. Some photodegradable products also took longer than expected to break down, Samson says. "They're under snow a good share of the season."

BioNet erosion control blankets, manufactured by North American Green of Evansville, IN, were chosen for the first phase of the Highway 14 project. A lighter-weight SC150BN blanket-consisting of a 70% straw and 30% coconut fiber matrix bonded with biodegradable thread and layered between biodegradable jute netting-was installed on roadside slopes. A denser, 100% coconut-fiber C125BN blanket was used in the drainage swales beside the roadway, which receive heavy runoff from snowmelt. The coconut fiber gives BioNet blankets a longer life-18 and 24 months, respectively-than 100% straw blankets, which was important in the dry climate where vegetation often takes more than one season to become fully established.

Compared to other temporary erosion control blankets (not TRMs), the Wyoming DOT has found that 100% biodegradable erosion control mats are more expensive. Samson estimates the installed cost can be up to 30% more. "The reason we haven't gone 100% to it is cost," says Samson. Although the Wyoming DOT uses a variety of products, not all of them biodegradable, outside the Yellowstone area, the park is something special: "It has the large, four-legged animals still easily visible from a roadway. And it demands that we change our designs to allow for that. Certainly we use rolled erosion products to control possible stormwater problems during and after construction, and we're just trying to modify that proven technique in a more wild-game-sensitive type of material."

Temporary biodegradable products have another advantage at Yellowstone over heavier TRMs. "We try to do visual mitigation, and in doing that we tend to leave irregular, contoured slopes and boulder groupings," says Samson. "Those can present a bit of a problem in trying to get the blankets on and over and fastened. The biodegradable mats are a lot more flexible. The plastic netting-especially in late fall when you have freezing temperatures-tends to tent more and cause an installation problem in getting it to conform to the topography. That's particularly pronounced when we're doing late fall applications in freezing temperatures."


Not Just the Mat, But How It's Fastened: Safety Issues

On some projects, the fasteners used to hold an erosion control blanket in place cause more concern than the blanket itself. When Erosion Control Specialists Inc. of Fort Worth, TX, installed 57,000 yd.2 of erosion control blanket on the north end of a runway extension at Tulsa International Airport, conventional steel staples were out of the question because of the danger of foreign-object damage-the risk of one of the staples coming loose and being ingested into a jet engine on take-off or landing.

The company found an alternative with Turf Tacs, corn-based plastic staples. "They degrade rather quickly, depending on the weather and soil conditions," says Thurman C. "Corky" Pierce Jr., CEO and president of Erosion Control Specialists. "In fact, this was the largest job that they'd ever been used on." Manufactured by EcoTurf Inc. of Chicago, the L- or U-shaped Turf Tacs usually biodegrade in three to eight weeks after installation and are designed to prevent damage to mowing equipment. They were used on this project to tack down the medium-weight Curlex II QuickGrass, a blanket of curled wood excelsior covered top and bottom with photodegradable extruded plastic mesh, manufactured by American Excelsior Company of Arlington, TX.

A specially designed stapler called the Turf Tacker, also by EcoTurf, allows installers to place the staples from a standing position. "We had a few problems using the Turf Tacs when the heavy clay would become crusted over and very hard to penetrate," reports Thurman. Once in place, however, they did the job, holding the blanket in place under less-than-ideal conditions. Even with 65-mph winds during parts of the installation, the Turf Tacs secured the partially installed blanket.

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It doesn't take a risk as dramatic as aircraft damage to make contractors opt for an alternative to steel staples. Schools and heavily trafficked public areas pose safety concerns as well, says Marsh of Southwest Environment Services. "When you put down a soil-retention blanket, you pin it down with sod staples. Now let's say you're putting this on a slope in a schoolyard. And let's say the guy goes out there, tries to mow it, and gets his tires caught in that netting and it pulls up a sod staple. It's like a missile; somebody could get hurt." In such cases, one option may be to forego the mat altogether and opt for spray-on erosion control-bonded fiber matrix or hydromulch. "You don't have the residual netting to deal with." While many such products are completely biodegradable, they are short-lived compared to most blankets and mats.

Such easily degradable fasteners as Turf Tacs might be too fleeting for some applications, points out Hurt of Environmental Technologies and Construction. "With the coconut-fiber products in particular, you're looking for the product to be there for a number of years providing support to the vegetation, so you want something that's going to be there for a while. The steel pins, once they've been in place for a month or two, start to rust, and that rust ends up forming a very, very secure connection to the ground." It makes them very difficult to pull out. Next Page >

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