4.7 Article

Microalgal bioremediation of brackish aquaculture wastewater

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 873, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162384

Keywords

Microalgae; Tilapia; Aquaculture wastewater; Bioremediation; Biomass; Neochloris sp

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The rapid development of the aquaculture industry has led to a significant increase in aquaculture wastewater generation. Microalgae bioremediation could be a cost-effective and environmentally friendly method for treating aquaculture wastewater and producing valuable microalgal biomass. This study investigated the feasibility of using microalgae to treat brackish wastewater generated from a commercial tilapia farm in Qatar. Four candidate strains (Haematococcus sp., Neochloris sp., Monoraphidium sp., and Nostoc sp.) were shortlisted based on their nitrogen assimilation, biomass yield, biomass quality, and ease of harvesting. Among them, Neochloris sp. showed the highest biomass yield and could potentially be a suitable candidate for aquaculture wastewater treatment.
Rapid aquaculture industry development contributed to a major increase in aquaculture wastewater generation. In the context of a circular economy, aquaculture wastewater treatment should simultaneously recover nutrients from the wastewater. Among many treatment methods, bioremediation using microalgae could be a cost-effective and environ-mentally friendly system that can be applied to treat aquaculture wastewater and simultaneously produce high-value microalgal biomass. This study explored the feasibility of treating brackish wastewater (0.8 % NaCl) generated from a Qatari commercial tilapia farm by microalgae. At first, 10 strains were grown using wastewater from the local farm in an indoor experiment. Based on nitrogen assimilation, biomass yield, biomass quality, and ease of harvesting, 4 can-didate strains (Haematococcus sp., Neochloris sp., Monoraphidium sp., and Nostoc sp.) were shortlisted for outdoor growth experiments. Although Nostoc sp. could not grow outdoor in the wastewater, the other three strains were able to assimilate at least 70.5 % of the total nitrogen in the wastewater. Haematococcus sp. and Neochloris sp. could be harvested using self-settling, whereas Monoraphidium required an energy-intensive tangential flow filtration mem-brane process. Hence, the overall energy requirement for bioremediation, including biomass dewatering, for Haematococcus sp., Neochloris sp., and Monoraphidium sp. were determined as 0.64, 0.78, and 5.68 MJ/m3, respec-tively. Neochloris sp. had almost twice the biomass yield compared to Haematococcus sp. - suggesting that Neochloris sp. could be a potential candidate for aquaculture wastewater treatment.

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