Highway detention ponds can fill with sediments from runoff water loaded with trafficrelated materials. Sediment disposal is problematic and various protocols are currently studied, including phytoremediation. Here we present a preliminary study on four highway detention ponds in southern France to identify key sediment characteristics. Our objectives were to characterize metal content and physicochemical properties of the sediments and to evaluate the role of charophytes, which grow spontaneously in ponds, on metal lability. Vegetated and non-vegetated areas were compared. The lability of Mn, Cu, Zn, and Pb complexes was greater in the presence of charophytes. No variation in grain size composition was observed between non-vegetated and vegetated areas. These results may be useful to implement a phytoremediation strategy using those spontaneous charophytes. Our results suggest that local factors may impact sediment characteristics: for instance, strong gusts of wind, typical of southern France climate, may blow particles (some of them not related to traffic) in and out of detention ponds.
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