Availability of Steelmaking Slag as a Nutrient Source for Marine Phytoplankton Growth, with Special Reference to Its Combined Use with Urban Sewage

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 1340 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2004
Abstract
Availability of the elements originating from steelmaking slag for various marine phytoplankters including purely cultured strains and natural populations was tested in land and shipboard laboratories. The results obtained demonstrate that, although their solubility was not uniform among different slags, dissolved iron, silicate and phosphate from the slag stimulate phytoplankton growth. No negative effect of the slag addition on their growth was observed at lower dose, e.g. less than 200 mg/l. Since most coastal waters are the hypernitrogenous environment due to anthropogenic load of ammonium, the slag can be an ideal source of silicate and phosphate, which restore the hyper-nitrogenous condition into truly eutrophic condition with balanced Redfield ratio. In so-called HNLC (high-nitrate low-chlorophyll) oceanic areas such as the Southern Ocean and the subarctic North Pacific, where iron is almost only limiting factor of the phytoplankton growth, the slag could also be a source of iron and enhance CO2 fixation by phytoplankton photosynthesis. (Key words: carbon deposition in deep-sea, marine environmental remediation, phytoplankton, slag as a source of iron, phosphate and silicate.)
Citation
APA:
(2004) Availability of Steelmaking Slag as a Nutrient Source for Marine Phytoplankton Growth, with Special Reference to Its Combined Use with Urban SewageMLA: Availability of Steelmaking Slag as a Nutrient Source for Marine Phytoplankton Growth, with Special Reference to Its Combined Use with Urban Sewage. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2004.