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Sustainable aquaculture through water recycling

conference contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by Veeriah Jegatheesan, C Manicom
The discharge of nutrient rich effluent from aquaculture systems into coastal waters is cause for concern. Direct filtration of aquaculture wastewater, using floating medium and sand with in line flocculation, and biological filtration using activated carbon, has the potential to improve water quality for recycling within aquaculture systems. This study looked at the performance of laboratory scale dual media and activated carbon filters in suspended solids and nutrient removal in the treatment of aquaculture wastewater. The dual media filter, with flocculant FeCl3 of 9mg/L, functioned best at a velocity of 7mJh with low headloss, and good turbidity and phosphorus removal (80% and 53% respectively). The activated carbon filter removed ammonia (84%) and nitrite (71 %) in the process of nitrification with a five-hour hydraulic retention time. This paper reports preliminary results from a longer term sustainable aquaculture project.

History

Event

International Symposium on Southeast Asian Water Environment (1st : 2003 : Bangkok, Thailand)

Publisher

SACWET/RECWET

Location

Bangkok, Thailand

Place of publication

[Bangkok, Thailand]

Start date

2003-10-23

End date

2003-10-25

ISBN-13

9781843390985

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1.1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the First International Symposium on Southeast Asian Water Environment

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