Depuration of a Freshwater Clam (Batissa Violacea) from Rewa River in Fiji Using a Bio-Filter Set-Up in Closed and Open Water Circulatory System

Ashneel Ajay Singh, Ravinesh Ram, Sheemal Vandhana Kumar, Sheenal Aashna, Shipaldika Verma,Zafiar Tasmeen Naaz,A. A. Mohamed Hatha

Nova Biotechnologica et Chimica(2021)

Cited 1|Views0
No score
Abstract
The effectiveness of the freshwater bivalve Batissa violacea depuration was tested in closed and open water circulatory system over a 48 h period. The closed circulatory system included a sand biofilter. Microbial levels were assessed every 4 h using Total Aerobic Plate Count (TPC) for heterotrophs and Most Probable Number (MPN) for coliforms. TPC and coliform loads in bivalve tissue reduced rapidly to low and undetectable levels in a closed circulatory system while open system showed a slower reduction. Both TPC and coliform loads remained above detectable levels throughout the depuration period. Closed system showed similar patterns of logarithmic reduction of TPC and coliforms in all cases with R2>0.95 and p<0.001. Similar results were observed for tank water however, reduction of TPC and coliforms were slower. Biofilm formation was observed in the interior walls of the aquarium tanks over 48 h in all cases. Physicochemical parameters did not show any significant change. The reduction in TPC and coliform load in B. violacea suggests that biofilter in a closed water circulatory system is a simple, cost-effective, water conserving and effective way to significantly reduce the spoilage and coliform bacterial load that is accumulated in the clams.
More
Translated text
Key words
freshwater clam,rewa river,fiji,bio-filter
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined