Why Do Aquaponics?
Aquaponics is an interesting
subject for anyone looking to grow their own plants with the
benefit of using fish as the nutrient source. A system can be as
small as to have one on your kitchen bench using goldfish and
growing herbs. To a larger system in your yard with silver perch
growing lettuces, tomatoes, herbs etc. An Aquaponics system is made
up of a tank containing the fish, and one or more grow beds for
vegetable production.
The fish supply nutrients to the plants that are in a grow bed and
the plants clean the water of the nutrients and the water then
travels back into the fish tank creating a recirculating system.
The fish water is pumped to the grow bed/s, using a system of
pipes. The grow bed can be filled with gravel (flood and drain),
clay pebbles or water (continuous flow). The fish water feeds the
plants of which there is a huge range to choose from to plant such
as tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce and green leafy vegetables,
the water then returns to the fish tank preferably by gravity. The
water that is returned to the fish tank is clean and ready for use
by the fish, and so the cycle continues.
Aquaponics is suitable for a number of fish such as Barramundi,
Bass, Jade Perch, Golden Perch, Silver Perch, Murray Cod if you are
in Australia all of which are great to eat as well. Tilapia is the
most common fish used in an aquaponics system outside of
Australia.
So we have established that water is recirculated through the
system, and you will need to add a small amount of water to
compensate for what is lost by evaporation, and transpiration by
the vegetables. Therefore Aquaponics uses only about 10% of the
water required for traditional gardening or fish farming.
Aquaponics is the future of home gardening and commercial fresh
food production for any country.
Aquaponics is a balanced, self-contained eco system that works!! No
chemicals are added or for that matter can be added to the
vegetable part of the system as that would cause your fish to die.
Garden pests can be kept to a minimum by housing the system in a
green house or by using non toxic methods.
What are the benefits?
Compared with Hydroponics,
Aquaponics does not need to use chemical nutrients for the
plants,
as the fish waste provides these nutrients to the plants. Compared
with Aquaculture, Aquaponics systems do not have a build-up of
wastes in the system that causes the water to become toxic due to
the nitrites. Aquaponics utilises this waste, with the bacteria in
the grow beds converting the nitrites into nitrates, which the
plants then consume as their main nutrient source.
- Uses 10% of water used in conventional growing
- No weeding or digging in the garden
- Can produce fish and plants for the familly all year
round.
Photos are of aquaponic systems
built and/or maintained by Martin and Kerri