Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS

Organic substances may be released in a recirculating aquaculture system (RAS) from a variety of sources such as fish, feed, and bacteria among other. Due to continuous re-use of the water, compounds can potentially accumulate in the system and impact the water quality negatively. Water samples have...

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Main Author: Grindedal, Kamilla Janson
Other Authors: Mikkelsen, Øyvind, N. Aslam, Shazia, Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Fakultet for naturvitenskap,Institutt for kjemi
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: NTNU 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2615652
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spelling ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/2615652 2023-05-15T15:31:29+02:00 Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS Grindedal, Kamilla Janson Mikkelsen, Øyvind N. Aslam, Shazia Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Fakultet for naturvitenskap,Institutt for kjemi 2018 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2615652 eng eng NTNU ntnudaim:16355 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2615652 96 Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry Environmental Chemistry Master thesis 2018 ftntnutrondheimi 2019-09-17T06:55:40Z Organic substances may be released in a recirculating aquaculture system (RAS) from a variety of sources such as fish, feed, and bacteria among other. Due to continuous re-use of the water, compounds can potentially accumulate in the system and impact the water quality negatively. Water samples have been collected from RAS farming Atlantic salmon (salmo salar) post-smolt over a 12-week time period at Nofimas s research station at Sunndalsøra. A novel non-target screening was performed to characterize organic compounds produced in aquaculture in response to various concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2 mg/l). Physico-chemical parameters included are pH, redox potential, temperature, salinity, conductivity and turbidity. In total the study included 35 samples from fish tanks treated with concentration levels ranging from 5 to 40 mg/l CO2. A liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) and liquid chromatography (UPLC) method was developed and optimized for the water in RAS. Ethyl Acetate (EtAc) stood out as the most suitable solvent for liquid-liquid extraction of the sample matrix followed by Dichloromethane (DCM). Elevated CO2 concentrations led to significant decrease in pH and increased Redox potential. Despite the significant decrease in pH, the levels were kept within safe recommended levels for farming Atlantic salmon (salmo salar). Twelve organic compounds were tentatively identified and assigned 8 different classes of chemical compounds. The classes which are Organophosphorus compound (OP), Carbohydrate, Amino acid, Ester, Alcohol, Steroid hormone, Ketone and unknowns respectively. Comparison between CO2 treatments investigated (5, 12, 26, 40 mg/l) revealed that the relative level of organic compounds did not differ significantly among treatments over the course of the study, where the majority had a declining trend. Steroid hormones and two compounds of unknown classes were likely metabolites released by fish during acclimatization to the new environment. Increasing levels of these compounds indicated structurally similar compounds produced within the system at the end, potentially toxic to the salmon post-smolt. One compound, Organophosphorus compound, showed signs of accumulation due to high levels detected at the end of the experiment. Master Thesis Atlantic salmon Salmo salar NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Sunndalsøra ENVELOPE(8.563,8.563,62.675,62.675)
institution Open Polar
collection NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftntnutrondheimi
language English
topic Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Environmental Chemistry
spellingShingle Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Environmental Chemistry
Grindedal, Kamilla Janson
Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS
topic_facet Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Environmental Chemistry
description Organic substances may be released in a recirculating aquaculture system (RAS) from a variety of sources such as fish, feed, and bacteria among other. Due to continuous re-use of the water, compounds can potentially accumulate in the system and impact the water quality negatively. Water samples have been collected from RAS farming Atlantic salmon (salmo salar) post-smolt over a 12-week time period at Nofimas s research station at Sunndalsøra. A novel non-target screening was performed to characterize organic compounds produced in aquaculture in response to various concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2 mg/l). Physico-chemical parameters included are pH, redox potential, temperature, salinity, conductivity and turbidity. In total the study included 35 samples from fish tanks treated with concentration levels ranging from 5 to 40 mg/l CO2. A liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) and liquid chromatography (UPLC) method was developed and optimized for the water in RAS. Ethyl Acetate (EtAc) stood out as the most suitable solvent for liquid-liquid extraction of the sample matrix followed by Dichloromethane (DCM). Elevated CO2 concentrations led to significant decrease in pH and increased Redox potential. Despite the significant decrease in pH, the levels were kept within safe recommended levels for farming Atlantic salmon (salmo salar). Twelve organic compounds were tentatively identified and assigned 8 different classes of chemical compounds. The classes which are Organophosphorus compound (OP), Carbohydrate, Amino acid, Ester, Alcohol, Steroid hormone, Ketone and unknowns respectively. Comparison between CO2 treatments investigated (5, 12, 26, 40 mg/l) revealed that the relative level of organic compounds did not differ significantly among treatments over the course of the study, where the majority had a declining trend. Steroid hormones and two compounds of unknown classes were likely metabolites released by fish during acclimatization to the new environment. Increasing levels of these compounds indicated structurally similar compounds produced within the system at the end, potentially toxic to the salmon post-smolt. One compound, Organophosphorus compound, showed signs of accumulation due to high levels detected at the end of the experiment.
author2 Mikkelsen, Øyvind
N. Aslam, Shazia
Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Fakultet for naturvitenskap,Institutt for kjemi
format Master Thesis
author Grindedal, Kamilla Janson
author_facet Grindedal, Kamilla Janson
author_sort Grindedal, Kamilla Janson
title Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS
title_short Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS
title_full Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS
title_fullStr Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS
title_full_unstemmed Water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (CCS) for Atlantic salmon post-smolt - Non-target screening of organic substances using UPLC-MS/MS
title_sort water quality in closed-containment aquaculture systems (ccs) for atlantic salmon post-smolt - non-target screening of organic substances using uplc-ms/ms
publisher NTNU
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2615652
long_lat ENVELOPE(8.563,8.563,62.675,62.675)
geographic Sunndalsøra
geographic_facet Sunndalsøra
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_source 96
op_relation ntnudaim:16355
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2615652
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