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Original Articles

‘HALOPHYTE FILTERS’: THE POTENTIAL OF CONSTRUCTED WETLANDS FOR APPLICATION IN SALINE AQUACULTURE

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Pages 352-364 | Published online: 31 Oct 2012
 

Abstract

World consumption of seafood continues to rise, but the seas and oceans are already overexploited. Land-based (saline) aquaculture may offer a sustainable way to meet the growing demand for fish and shellfish. A major problem of aquaculture is nutrient waste, as most of the nutrients added through feed are released into the environment in dissolved form. Wetlands are nature's water purifiers. Constructed wetlands are commonly used to treat contaminated freshwater effluent. Experience with saline systems is more limited. This paper explores the potential of constructed saline wetlands for treating the nutrient-rich discharge from land-based saline aquaculture systems. The primary function of constructed wetlands is water purification, but other ancillary benefits can also be incorporated into treatment wetland designs. Marsh vegetation enhances landscape beauty and plant diversity, and wetlands may offer habitat for fauna and recreational areas. Various approaches can be taken in utilizing plants (halophytes, macro-algae, micro-algae) in the treatment of saline aquaculture effluent. Their strengths and weaknesses are reviewed here, and a conceptual framework is presented that takes into account economic and ecological benefits as well as spatial constraints. Use of the framework is demonstrated for assessing various saline aquaculture systems in the southwestern delta region of the Netherlands.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This paper is part of the strategic research program ‘Sustainable spatial development of ecosystems, landscapes, seas and regions’ and is funded by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation. We thank Prof. J.T.A. Verhoeven and Prof. H.J. Lindeboom for their critical reviews of an earlier version of the manuscript.

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