A new review published in
Engineering has summarized recent progress in using nanostructures to detect and eliminate hazards in aquaculture, providing technical support for safer aquatic products and more sustainable farming systems.
Aquatic products serve as a key protein and omega‑3 fatty acid source for global populations, yet rapid aquaculture expansion has brought persistent food safety risks, including marine toxins, heavy metals, microplastics and pathogenic bacteria. Conventional detection approaches often rely on bulky instruments, long assay times and complex operations, while traditional removal methods face limitations in efficiency, cost or secondary pollution. Benefiting from large surface areas and tunable physicochemical properties, nanostructures can be functionalized with antibodies, aptamers and ligands to act as sensing indicators, signal amplifiers, photocatalysts and separation materials.
The review covers applications across four major hazard categories. For marine toxins including saxitoxin, okadaic acid, brevetoxin and tetrodotoxin, nanostructure‑integrated sensors based on colorimetry, fluorescence, surface‑enhanced Raman scattering and electrochemistry have enabled rapid and sensitive detection. In heavy metal monitoring, nanomaterial platforms support colorimetric, SERS and smartphone‑assisted fluorescence detection, while magnetic and high‑surface‑area nanostructures provide effective adsorption toward mercury, lead, cadmium and copper ions in aquatic environments. For microplastics and nanoplastics, nanostructure‑assisted techniques including single‑particle ICP‑MS and SERS improve identification of tiny particles, and functional nanocomposites support adsorption and catalytic degradation. In terms of pathogenic bacteria such as
Vibrio parahaemolyticus,
Aeromonas hydrophila and
Edwardsiella tarda, nanostructure‑based biosensors support rapid on‑site testing, and green nanostructured antimicrobials help control pathogens while reducing antibiotic reliance.
The review also discusses integration of nanostructures into existing aquaculture workflows and points to future directions, including improving stability in complex saline environments, enhancing detection sensitivity, developing multifunctional nanosystems, promoting sustainable and biodegradable nanomaterials, establishing standardized testing protocols and incorporating artificial intelligence in material design and data analysis. It also notes the need for corresponding standards and regulations to ensure environmental and food safety during large‑scale applications.
By offering sensitive, rapid and sustainable tools for hazard management, nanostructure technologies are expected to support the healthy development of aquaculture and contribute to global food security.
The paper “Enhancing Safety in Aquaculture with Nanostructures: Hazard Detection and Elimination,” is authored by Qingsong Zhang, Xilong Wang, Li Lian Wong, Shikai Liu, Ming Li, Guoqing Wang. Full text of the open access paper:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eng.2025.07.044. For more information about
Engineering, visit the website at
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/engineering.