Sunday, July 29, 2007

Human Urine Aids the Growth of Fish Food Organism

A research team from West Bengal has discovered that human urine could be an excellent liquid waste aid in the mass production of fish food organism called Moina micrura, a type of zooplankton. The team studied the nutrient potentials of human urine and then compared its efficacy with other waste products like cow urine, human-cow mixed urine, vermin-compost, cow dung, poultry droppings and mixed wastes (vermin-cow-poultry) for the mass culture of M. micrura in 24 outdoor tanks.

The team found that the newly born M. micrura held in the treatment with human urine started reproduction at least 4 days earlier than other solid wastes. Total number of M. micrura counted in the culture tank, related with offspring production per life span, was maximum in case of human urine treatment, followed by human–cow mixed urine, cow urine, vermin-compost, poultry droppings, mixed wastes (vermin–cow–poultry), cow dung and control treatments.

The relationship between the total offspring production per female per life span and the nitrogen content of water in different treatments implied that human urine can be used for the mass production of zooplankton Moina micrura required for larval and post larval rearing of commercial fishes, write the researchers in a recent issue of Ecological Engineering.

No comments: