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Assessment Of Sawdust Activated Carbon (Sac) In The Treatment Of Aquaculture Effluent

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– Assessment Of Sawdust Activated Carbon (Sac) In The Treatment Of Aquaculture Effluent –

Download Assessment Of Sawdust Activated Carbon (Sac) In The Treatment Of Aquaculture Effluent. Environmental Engineering students who are writing their projects can get this material to aid their research work.

Abstract

Aquaculture can be described as the production of aquatic organisms, both plant and animal under controlled or semi-controlled conditions (Summerfelt, 2003).

However, Adewumi(2015), defined aquaculture practice in Nigeria as the rearing of fish in an enclosed and fairly shallow body of water where all its life processes is being controlled.

According to Sanjaya (2013), untreated aquaculture effluent generally contains high levels of organic material, numerous pathogenic micro-organisms, as well as nutrient and its indiscriminate discharge may lead to serious environmental and health hazards if not treated appropriately before final disposal.

Therefore, as the population increases and aquaculture practice expands, it is important to provide for an adequate waste management strategy to ensure a favourable environmental condition.

Introduction

Boyd (2003), pointed out that aquaculture effluent has become large enough to have significant impacts on the environment, mainly in the form of eutrophication in rivers, as well as heavy metal pollution, which is supported by environmental activists and several scientists (Dierberg and Kiattisimukul, 1996; Goldburg and Triplett, 1997;

Naylor et al., 1998, 2000) whose serious concern have been the pollution of limited fresh water (Boyd and Gautier, 2000; Boyd and Tucker, 2000).

Since aquaculture effluent is being disposed indiscriminately (Omofunmi et al., 2016a), mainly because farmers see wastewater treatment as being an added expense that does not contribute to fish production. Hence, there is need to develop a viable, cost effective, and environmentally friendly means of treating fish farm effluent before its disposal.

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