Static bioassay tests for acute toxicity of four heavy metals to fry of the fish Lates calcarifer in brackishwater medium were conducted. The 96 h LC50 values of metals such as Hg, Cu, Cr, and Mn for two different size groups 11 +/- 3 mm and 24 +/- 4 mm were found to be 0.085, 1.3, 27.9, and 220 mg/L and 0.20, 1.8, 33, and 250 mg/L, respectively. The rank order of toxicity of metals was found to be Hg > Cu > Cr > Mn. Using the safe concentration factor of 0.01, the allowable safe concentration for Hg, Cu, Cr, and Mn in brackishwater are 0.00085-0.002, 0.013-0.018, 0.279-0.33, and 2.20-2.50 mg/L, respectively. The damage caused to different organ systems of the fish, exposed to the heavy metals, agrees with the rank order of the toxicity. Heavy nerve tissue necrosis was observed in fish exposed to mercury. Copper induced gill epithelial necrosis and kidney tubular degeneration. Chromium and manganese accounted for various histopathological manifestations involving vital organs such as liver and kidney.
Development of new economically feasible ecofriendly products from agricultural wastes or byproducts for shrimp farm wastewater treatment is the objective of our continued research. Ammonia is a nitrogenous toxicant, which is commonly found in wastewater from shrimp farms. In the present study, we explored the possibility of the use of simply and inexpensively prepared bagasse products so that this abundant crop byproduct could be used to remove ammonia from shrimp farm wastewater. Bagasse, a natural highly fibrous lignocellulosic byproduct of sugarcane, was converted into five different products. Experimental results have shown that ammonia is efficiently removed from wastewater by four bagasse products with a dose of 1 to 6 g/L within 24 hours. The effect of bagasse products on other water quality parameters and growth kinetics of biofilm bacteria onto bagasse fiber have also been studied. Efficacies of products were compared by using statistical analysis. Products developed from bagasse are useful and economical. Water Environ. Res., 78, 938 (2006).
In the present study, molecular methods based on sequencing of clone libraries have been used to provide sequence and the phylogenetic information of ammonia oxidizing bacteria (AOB). Ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) gene, which catalyzed the oxidation of ammonia to hydroxyl amine in the initial rate-determining step of nitrification was targeted for detection and characterization of AOB using gene-specific primers. The amoA genes obtained through the clone library construction are closely affiliated with Nitrosomonas sp. and other uncultured beta proteobacteria. The levels of nucleotide similarity and amino acid similarity ranged from 85-99% and 83-88%, respectively. The level of conservation of the amino acid sequences is 73%. The use of a matrix prepared from abundantly available lignocellulosic agrowaste-bagasse has successfully been demonstrated for biostimulation of AOB in aquaculture environment by supplementing nutritional requirement facilitating the biofilm mode of growth of the autotrophic consortia. Present study is useful in predictability and reliability of the treatment of ammonia in brackishwater aquaculture.
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