4.6 Article

Monitoring Aquaculture Water Quality: Design of an Early Warning Sensor with Aliivibrio fischeri and Predictive Models

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s18092848

Keywords

Aliivibrio fischeri; water quality monitoring; whole-cell biosensor; linear concentration addition; linear independent action; aquaculture

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway [268017/E40]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61650410655]
  3. Regional Forskningsfond Oslofjordfondet [272037]
  4. Regional Forskningsfond Hovedstaden [273869]
  5. NFR INT-BILAT program [276650]
  6. Chongqing Key Laboratory of Micro-Nanosystems Technology and Smart Transducing [KFJJ2017087]
  7. Chongqing Innovation Team of Colleges and Universities-Smart Micro-Nano Systems Technology Applications [CXTDX201601025]
  8. Chongqing Education Commission-Science and Technology Research Program [KJ1600604]
  9. Chongqing Research Program of Basic Research and Frontier Technology [cstc2015jcyjA20023, cstc2016jcyjA2161, cstc2016jcyjA0292, cstc2017jcyjA1842]

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A novel toxicity-warning sensor for water quality monitoring in recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) is presented. The design of the sensor system mainly comprises a whole-cell biosensor. Aliivibrio fischeri, a luminescent bacterium widely used in toxicity analysis, was tested for a mixture of known fish-health stressors, namely nitrite, un-ionized ammonia, copper, aluminum and zinc. Two toxicity predictive models were constructed. Correlation, root mean squared error, relative error and toxic behavior were analyzed. The linear concentration addition (LCA) model was found suitable to ally with a machine learning algorithm for prediction of toxic events, thanks to additive behavior near the limit concentrations for these stressors, with a root-mean-squared error (RMSE) of 0.0623, and a mean absolute error of 4%. The model was proved to have a smaller relative deviation than other methods described in the literature. Moreover, the design of a novel microfluidic chip for toxicity testing is also proposed, which is to be integrated in a fluidic system that functions as a bypass of the RAS tank to enable near-real time monitoring. This chip was tested with simulated samples of RAS water spiked with zinc, with an EC50 of 6,46E-7 M. Future work will be extended to the analysis of other stressors with the novel chip.

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