By
Charmain Courcelle BILOXI
-- Mississippi State University researchers at the Coastal
Research and Extension Center in Biloxi are developing water
discharge options for the catfish and horticulture
industries. Environmental
standards for pond effluents and horticultural runoffs have
not been passed yet, but the Environmental Protection Agency
has actively considered a national set of regulations to
limit the release of nutrients from these operations for
several years. Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station scientists Mark
LaSalle and Cecil Pounders, economist Ben Posadas and
research assistant Christine Walters are looking for ways to
help catfish and horticultural growers meet stricter
effluent regulations in the future. The
team is evaluating the use of hydroponic and "sawdroponic"
systems as potential pond effluent treatment methods. In
hydroponic systems, plants are grown in a bath or flow of
nutrient-rich solution. Sawdroponics is a variation of
hydroponics that uses sawdust as a soil-free planting
medium. In both systems, plants take up available nutrients
from the solution for growth. LaSalle
said plants growing in hydroponic and sawdroponic systems
could remove excess nutrients found in pond effluents. The
treated effluent could then be discharged into the
environment or recirculated into the pond production
system. "We
think linking the catfish and horticulture industries
through hydroponics or sawdroponics will help minimize the
environmental impacts from both types of operations,"
LaSalle said. "Effluent released from ponds could serve as a
water and nutrient source for horticultural plants, while
the catfish ponds receive water that has been 'cleaned up'
to ensure good water quality." LaSalle
and Posadas had previously assessed the use of constructed
wetlands to treat pond effluent. The constructed wetlands
significantly improved water quality, but they required
higher investments and led to higher operating costs for
catfish production, Posadas said. "We
found that constructed wetlands cost an extra 7 cents per
pound of catfish harvested. This included the cost of
constructing and maintaining the wetland," Posadas said.
"But there is also a cost from not being able to grow
catfish on this productive land." The
group hopes hydroponic or sawdroponic production of a food
or landscape crop will offset effluent treatment costs and
generate extra revenue for the catfish grower. LaSalle
said adding crop production to a catfish operation requires
additional labor, but a catfish grower might be able to
partner with a truck farmer to produce food crops for local
markets. In the
hydroponic system, LaSalle and colleagues have tried growing
tomatoes, beans, Chinese water spinach and lettuce. They are
trying to grow rooted plants, including daylilies and mondo
grass, in the sawdroponic system, which supports root
propagation. The team will evaluate which plants grow best
under each system and determine best management
practices. "We
have already seen that we have to redesign the sawdroponic
system," LaSalle said. "The sawdust we used was too fine,
and it prevented water from flowing through. We will try a
coarser bark material underneath the sawdust layer next to
see if that works better." The
group is also determining what size hydroponic system is
required for effluent treatment. LaSalle and Posadas'
results from their constructed wetland study suggested an
area equal to 25 percent of catfish pond size was required
for the greatest improvements in water quality. "It
might be less for hydroponic-based systems," LaSalle said.
To
answer this question, the team will collect water entering
the sawdroponic setup and water that has passed one-third,
two-thirds and all of the way through the plant production
system for water quality analysis. "We are
hopeful that these systems will act as a type of filter for
aquaculture effluents that will improve water quality in
ponds and simultaneously reduce fertilizer and pesticide
runoff from horticulture," LaSalle said. Released:
June 3, 2002
Mississippi Agricultural
News
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Ponds may yield
more than catfish
Contact: Dr. Mark LaSalle, (228) 388-4710
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:00
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