What is Recirculation Aquaculture System Part-5
Water Quality: Ammonia
Ammonia exists in two species:
un-ionized ammonia (NH3) and ionized ammonium (NH4+),
the amount of each type depending on the pH and temperature of the water. At a
lower pH, the excess hydroniums (H+) in the water tend to drive the
balance toward ammonium. At a higher pH, the lack of hydroniums tends to
produce un-ionized ammonia. Temperature has a lesser effect, with the amount of
un-ionized ammonia increasing with increasing temperature at any given pH.
This is of more than academic
interest to aquaculturists, since only the un-ionized form is toxic. So, the
total ammonia (ionized and un-ionized combined) that is measured by water
quality analysis must be evaluated in light of pH and temperature. The
generally accepted rule of thumb is that un-ionized ammonia in excess of 0.02
mg/L is potentially toxic, though this may vary slightly with species of fish.
The un-ionized ammonia calculator below can be used to determine the toxicity
of any given total ammonia concentration. If the total ammonia slider is left
all the way down, the readout gives the percent of total ammonia in the
un-ionized form. Alternatively, the total ammonia concentration can be
indicated with the slider and the actual concentration of un-ionized ammonia
will be displayed.
The fact that low pH reduces ammonia
toxicity is fortuitous for fish culturists. Fish produce both carbon dioxide
and ammonia as waste products. As you have learned, carbon dioxide reacts with
water to form carbonic acid. In the absence of buffering this lowers the pH of
the water lowering the toxicity of the ammonia that is also being produced.
Using the calculator, you can see that while 10 mg/L total ammonia is non-toxic
at a pH of 6.5, only 0.5 mg/L can be tolerated at 8.0! While recirculation
aquaculturists may count on low pH to reduce ammonia toxicity during hauling
and other times of brief confinement, they cannot use this effect in their
systems because of the negative effect of low pH on nitrification as explained
below.
Nitrification
Nitrification is the biological
process in which bacteria use reduced nitrogen compounds, such as ammonia, as
food by oxidizing them. This process drives the earth's nitrogen cycle, so it
is widespread in the biosphere. It also is used by sanitary engineers in
municipal waste treatment plants to remove ammonia in sewage. In the part of
the cycle of interest in recirculation aquaculture, ammonia (NH3 or
NH4+) is oxidized by bacteria to partially reduced
nitrite (NO2) which is toxic to fish, but less so than
ammonia. Nitrosomonas spp. are the bacteria that biology
textbooks always give credit to for this reaction, though in the aquatic
environment other bacteria are likely more important. It is probably best just
to refer to them as ammonia-nitrite conversion bacteria. Nitrite is then
further oxidized to nitrate (NO3) by bacteria (again Nitroacter spp.
is the common example though nitrite-nitrate conversion bacteria is better).
Nitrate is relatively non-toxic to fish and may safely accumulate in the tank
until it is flushed out by replacement water or converted to gaseous nitrogen
(N2) by anaerobic
heterotrophs and lost to the atmosphere in a process known as denitrification. Since the conversion of ammonia is
a biological process, time is required for the bacterial population to develop
sufficient biomass to remove the toxic nitrogen load. Also, the bacteria that
oxidize ammonia must develop first and produce the nitrite before the bacteria
that use nitrite for food can grow. Nitrification bacteria do not grow well
below a pH of 7 and will cease to provide nitrification if system pH falls into
the acidic range. This puts the recirculation aquaculturist in a balancing act.
If pH rises to near 8 or above, even tiny amounts of ammonia that may be left
by the bacteria will be toxic to the fish, but if pH falls below 7 the bacteria
will quit and ammonia will soar to levels dangerous even at the relatively safe
low pH. As explained in the previous chapter, carbonate buffering provided by
sodium bicarbonate makes it relatively easy to maintain pH in the ideal range
of between 7 and 8.
Measuring Nitrogen Compounds
Ammonia
Ammonia is usually measured by the
nessler or the salicylate method, both of which are available in kit form. If
the aqauculturist is using Amquel or its equivalent for chloramine removal,
then the salicylate method should be chosen since Amquel interferes with
nesslerization. These tests are colorimetric. The nessler method has a greater
range while the salicylate method is more sensitive. Since ammonia is a
byproduct of the catabolism of protein, it is strongly influenced by feeding
and subsequent metabolism of the feed by fish and bacteria. Ammonia typically
peaks about 90 minutes after feeding.
When measuring ammonia, you must
also measure pH because the toxicity of any given amount of ammonia is relative
to the pH of the water. The pH determines how much of the ammonia is ionized
and how much is unionized. The test kits yield total ammonia which is both
ionized and unionized combined.
Test kits can give total ammonia
readings two ways, simply total ammonia or total ammonia-nitrogen (TAN). When
total ammonia is measured the weight expressed (usually mg/L) is the weight of
the whole ammonia molecule, the nitrogen atom and the hydrogen atoms. When TAN
is measured the weight is only the nitrogen atom. Thus, the same amount of
ammonia would be heavier expressed as total ammonia than as TAN. Ionized
ammonia is a little heavier than unionized because of the extra hydrogen atom,
but the difference is slight, and most of the ammonia is ionized, so we can
just assume the ionized weight to convert between total ammonia and TAN. To
convert from total ammonia to TAN multiply the total ammonia by 0.775. To
convert from TAN to total ammonia multiply TAN by 1.29. In this course, we
always use total ammonia.
Nitrite
Nitrite is a toxic compound produced
from ammonia during the first step of nitrification. The toxicity of nitrite is
dependent on chloride concentration and the acutely toxic concentration varies
from less than 1 mg/L to 10 or more, depending on chloride. Under certain
conditions it can be elevated even when ammonia is not, so it should be
measured, as well. Nitrite is measured by a colorimetric assay that is altered
by chloride.
When significant concentrations of
nitrite exist in a tank the fish develop a blood disease termed
methemoglobinemia. When nitrite ions come into contact with hemoglobin they
oxidize the iron atoms in the hemoglobin molecule and the hemoglobin can no
longer reversibly bind oxygen. With the hemoglobin poisoned, the blood cannot
carry sufficient oxygen and the fish dies of tissue suffocation. This is very
similar to the way carbon monoxide poisoning kills. Methemoglobinemia is called
"brown blood disease" because the oxidized hemoglobin is brown, not
red, giving the blood a rusty color. Ironically, the osmoregulatory mechanisim
in freshwater fish causes the fish to poison themselves in the presence of
nitrite. All freshwater fish are excellent ion scavengers, but if the
concentration of chloride ions (Cl-) is low and the concentration of
NO2- is high, the Cl--HCO3- pump
in the chloride cell will exchange HCO3- for NO2- instead
of Cl-, actually pumping the toxic NO2- into
their body. Therefore, an antidote to NO2- poisoning
is to put salt (or calcium chloride) in the water. This works by raising the Cl- content
relative to the NO2- concentration, allowing the Cl--HCO3- pump
to snag the right molecule. As an example, for catfish, a ratio of Cl- to
NO2- of 16:1 or greater is protective. In practical
terms, raising the Cl-concentration of water to 40 mg/L decreases
the toxicity of nitrite by a factor of 30.
Recommended Tests
Nitrate
Nitrate is the end product of
nitrification. It is not terribly toxic to fish and can safely build up in
tanks to 50 mg/L or more. The nitrate assay is sometimes used to signal the
need to conduct a partial water change. Nitrate tests first reduce nitrate to
nitrite and then test for nitrite, so if there is significant nitrite in the
tank, that amount needs to be subtracted from the nitrate value to get an
accurate result, however, if you have enough nitrite in the water to alter the
nitrate test your fish are dying from nitrite toxicity!
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