2015 journal article

Effects of two different ozone doses on total residual oxidants, nitrogen compounds and nitrification rate in seawater recirculating systems for black seabream Acanthopagrus schlegelii (Bleeker)

AQUACULTURAL ENGINEERING, 67, 1–7.

By: J. Park*, P. Kim*, S. Park* & H. Daniels n

author keywords: Ozonation; Seawater; Recirculating aquaculture system (RAS); Residual oxidant; Nitrogen compounds; Black seabream
TL;DR: Based on the results of this study, continuous ozonation should not exceed 20 g ozone/kg feed (mean TRO 0.15 mg/L) in a seawater RAS to avoid negatively affecting the nitrification efficiency of the bio-filters. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

Ozone was applied to seawater recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) to measure the effects on water quality and biofilter efficiency. Three replicate experimental systems were used in this study. Each system consisted of four rectangular culture tanks, a sump, two settling chambers, a foam fractionator and a trickling biofilter. The control system (CS) was not ozonated, but Treatment 1 (T 20) and Treatment 2 (T 40) were ozonated with 20 and 40 g O3/kg feed day−1, respectively. Three hundred twenty black seabream (mean weight ± S.D. of 334.5 ± 1.9 g) were stocked into each system, and cultured for the entire 44-day study period. During this period, total residual oxidants (TRO), nitrogen compounds (Total-ammonia–N, TAN; nitrite–N, NO2–N and nitrate–N, NO3–N) were measured, and nitrification efficiencies of the trickling biofilters were calculated for each system. Generally, the application of ozone to the seawater systems reduced TAN and NO2–N concentrations in the culture tanks of both treatments. However, the nitrification rate of the biofilter in the T 40 and the CS systems was about 50% lower than the rate of the biofilter in the T 20 system. Therefore, the use of a moderate dose of ozone (20 g O3/kg feed day−1) appears to enhance nitrification, possibly through the reduction of dissolved organic matter that may interfere with bacterial activity. However, application of ozone at 40 g O3/kg feed day−1 appears to depress microbial activity associated with biofiltration and nitrogen removal efficiency, perhaps through toxicity of associated compounds or directly through residual oxidants. Based on the results of this study, continuous ozonation should not exceed 20 g ozone/kg feed (mean TRO 0.15 mg/L) in a seawater RAS to avoid negatively affecting the nitrification efficiency of the bio-filters.