Development of Sustainable Aquaculture Systems Using Recirculating Aquaculture Systems
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.70102/AEEF/V2I1/3Keywords:
Aquaculture; Aquatic Ecosystems; Freshwater LakesAbstract
A recirculatory aquaculture method, which consumes less water and land while producing more fish per unit area, is an alternative to meet the growing demand for fish from inland aquaculture. The culture system's organic waste-rich water can be purified using a biofilter so that it can be used again. As a result, in areas with water scarcity, reliance on outside sources of water might be decreased. Given the significance of biofilters in aquaculture, the experiment employed three distinct media-based biofilter types: zeolite, oyster shell, and charcoal. There were eight experiments. The water's fundamental boundaries, such as temperature, pH, DO, all-out alkalinity, hardness, DOM, smelling salts, nitrite, nitrate, and phosphate, were estimated both before and after filtering. During the examination, a variety of channels demonstrated viability in cleaning the water used for fish raising, and the majority of water quality estimates fell within ranges deemed organically suitable for fish culture. To reduce major misfortunes in advance, the main goal of this study project is to assess the endurance state of shrimp by seeing photos of the animals submerged in water and remotely observing using a cell phone
