Effect of temperature on chlorine treatment for elimination of freshwater phytoplankton in ballast water: bench-scale test

Author:

Casas-Monroy Oscar1,Vanden Byllaardt Julie2,Bradie Johanna1,Sneekes Andrea3,Kaag Klaas4,Bailey Sarah A.1

Affiliation:

1. Great Lakes Laboratory for Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Lakeshore Road, Burlington, ON L7S 1A1, Canada.

2. Hamilton Harbour Remedial Action Plan Office, Canada Centre for Inland Waters, 867 Lakeshore Road, Burlington, ON L7S 1A1, Canada.

3. Wageningen Marine Research, P.O. Box 68 1780AB, Ijmuiden, the Netherlands.

4. Wageningen Marine Research, P.O. Box 57 1780A, Den Helder, the Netherlands.

Abstract

Chlorine efficacy as a biocide for ballast water treatment was investigated under cold- and warm-water temperatures across winter and summer seasons. Freshwater phytoplankton samples were collected and acclimated under in situ environmental conditions ranging from 2 to 22 °C. Samples were exposed to seven chlorine treatments (from 0.02 to 5.0 ppm), in addition to a control (0.0 ppm). Free-chlorine concentrations, phytoplankton abundance, and photosynthetic efficiency were measured up to 48 h following treatment. After 4 h of treatment at concentrations less than 0.22 ppm, phytoplankton densities were reduced by more than 50%, without cell resurgence. Similar reduction was recorded immediately after exposure when chlorine concentrations were higher than 3.0 ppm. After 8 h, free chlorine neared 0.0 ppm for initial chlorine concentrations below 1.2 ppm, irrespective of temperature regime. Winter phytoplankton exhibited slightly lower mortality to chlorine exposure regardless of the temperature, although they also exhibited lower photosynthetic efficiency. Despite a general absence of significant effect of temperature on the chlorine decay, our results suggest that higher doses of chlorine or longer exposure times may be required during winter to achieve full treatment effect. Tests at large scales are needed to further confirm these findings.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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