Rate: (5 Ratings)
This article will cover the basics of hobby aquaponics, and more importantly give step by step instructions on how to build and maintain a small flood and drain aquaponics system. What is Aquaponics? Aquaponics is the combination of recalculating aquaculture (fish farming) and hydroponics (growing plants without soil). The fish waste provides the nutrients the plants need and the plants, in taking up these nutrients, help to purify the water in which the fish live. This is an organic process with the only input to the system being fish food which creates a sustainable ecosystem where both plants and fish can thrive. What Plants Can Grow In This System? Aquaponics is particularly successful for growing leafy crops like lettuce, herbs, chives, spinach, arugula etc. because of the high nitrogen content in the water, but other food crops do well including tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, beans, peas, squash and melons, but these fruiting plants may not produce as high a yield as with hydroponics only systems where higher levels of phosphorous and potassium may be maintained. What about the Fish? Tilapia are generally the fish of choice for larger aquaponic systems because they are fast growing, can tolerate a wide variety of water quality conditions and have firm white meat. For small hobby systems koi or gold fish work well. It is a good idea to also include a plecostomus cat to help keep the tank clean. Start with approximately one inch of fish for each gallon of water in the tank.
Comments
akbattag said
on 4/6/2008 I am trying to set up one of these systems at home and was wondering if I could use one powerful hydroponic air pump to power the air stones, under gravel filter, and feed the hydro system instead of getting separte pumps for each. I also have a power filter that hangs on the side of the tank that doesn't get in the way of my hydro trays, so I dont need to rely on the under gravel filter for all the filtration. I have a 30 gal tank and about 2 sq ft of growing space. If one pump would work, how powerful would it need to be, in terms of gph?
SunflowerOcity said
on 9/23/2007 Hi Pattiann,
I am glad you enjoyed the article. I am not sure which desert climate you live in, but you can generally find planting calendars for your area with an internet search on the county name and the words planting calendar. For example if you search on “Maricopa County planting calendar” you will get this link: http://cals.arizona.edu/pubs/garden/az1005.pdf which takes you to a nice vegetable planting calendar for Maricopa County in Arizona. The calendar tells you what to plant and when, and provide some other useful tips.
Let me know if you have any other gardening questions and I will be glad to help.
Chris
pattiann said
on 9/14/2007 this article by Mr. Kline was very informative and interesting. I would like to read more articles from him. I would like to find out what knowledge he has on different types of vegetables that can be grown in the desert climate in the winter season. rate it a 10