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Environmental Technology & Innovation
Elsever
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| Abstract: |
The agricultural industry is highly dependent on using water quality due to challenging soil and
climatic conditions. Hence, this study investigated the potential reuse of treated effluents from a
pilot-scale coupled UASB-Biofilter system for the cultivation of drought-resistant fodder shrubs
using wastewater generated from the buffalo milkmaid process. The milkmaid wastewater was
treated in a sedimentation tank, with the aim of removing large suspended solids and settleable
organic matter, and then in an up-flow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB). The UASB effluent was
treated in a biofilter. A field experiment was carried out at the Experimental Farm of Veterinary
Faculty, Suez Canal University, from March to October 2023 to study the effect of different
quality of treated buffalo milkmaid wastewater with COD (Null, 1000 ± 28, 130 ± 33, 520 ± 27,
100 ± 30 mg.L 1, respectively)on the growth of Acacia saligna and Moringa oleifera shrubs. Split
plot designed with five Treatments: Control (freshwater) (T1), sedimentation tank effluent (T2),
Up-flow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket (modified UASB with rice straw biochar) effluent unit (T3),
conventional UASB effluent unit (T4), and biofilter effluent unit (T5), of each species. Vegetative
growth, the biomass of shrubs, and the soil NPK, organic matter, and organic carbon were
determined. Moringa oleifera shrubs showed higher biomass (2330.3 g)and nitrogen content
(62.02 mg kg 1) in soil compared to A. saligna. UASB treatments (T3 and T4) promoted the best
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