4.1 Article

Duckweed: an effective tool for phyto-remediation

Journal

TOXICOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 8, Pages 1256-1266

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02772248.2013.879309

Keywords

non-conventional; duckweed; nutrient recycling; nutrition; phyto-remediation; wastewater management

Funding

  1. Amity University UP, Noida, India

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Effective wastewater treatment through conventional methods that rely on heavy aeration are expensive to install and operate. Duckweed is capable of recovering or extracting nutrients or pollutants and is an excellent candidate for bio-remediation of wastewaters. Such plants grow very fast, utilizing wastewater nutrients and also yield cost effective protein-rich biomass as a by-product. Duckweeds being tiny surface-floating plants are easy to harvest and have an appreciable amount of protein (15%-45% dry mass basis) and a lower fiber (7%-14% dry mass basis) content. Besides nutrient extraction, duckweeds has been found to reduce total suspended solids, biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), and chemical oxygen demand in wastewater significantly. Depending on the initial concentrations of nutrients, duckweed-covered systems can remove nitrate (NO3-) at daily rates of 120-590mg NO3- m(-2) (73%-97% of initial concentration) and phosphate (PO4-) at 14-74mg PO4- m(-2) (63%-99% of initial concentration). Removal efficiencies within 3days of 96% and 99% have been reported for BOD and ammonia (NH3). Besides several genera of duckweeds (Spirodela, Lemna, Wolffia), other surface-floating aquatic plants like water hyacinth (Eichhornia) are well known for their phyto-remediation qualities.

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