Abstract
The freshwater plant species Lemna minor suffers significantly in nutrient uptake and biomass accumulation performance when grown in saline effluents, such as those produced in brackish aquaculture operations. To determine the exact impact of salinity to these plant traits, this study measured the nutrient uptakes and biochemical composition of L. minor grown in synthetic aquaculture medium of increasing salinity levels. The overall trend for biomass growth showed that higher salinity levels resulted in lower growth with a mass gain of about 13% in 12.5 ppt medium compared with 96% in the control. However, the NO3– uptake appeared to be unaffected by differences in salinity. NH4+ uptake was significantly affected only at salinity concentrations of 10 ppt and 12.5 ppt. The relationship between PO43– uptake and salinity was less clear, as PO43– levels appeared to decrease linearly for all test groups and were shown to be statistically insignificant. At the end of the experiment period, the control medium showed the lowest measured COD levels, 17 mg/L while the 12.5 ppt solution has the highest COD level, 61 mg/L. Protein content showed a decline with increasing salinity of growth medium, while carbohydrate content was shown to be increasing. These preliminary data identify the general relationship between salinity and the measured criteria of L. minor and will subsequently serve as the basis for further remediation studies and the development of salinity mitigation methods.
Published Version
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