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Aquaponics Design, Types, Components, Advantages

Introduction of Aquaponics Design:

Today, let us discuss about Aquaponics Design, Advantages, Disadvantages, types and components of system.

Aquaponics is a combined of aquaculture, which is growing fish and other aquatic animals, and hydroponics which is growing plants without soil. Aquaponics uses these two in a symbiotic arrangement in which plants are fed the aquatic animals’ waste. In return, the vegetables fresh the water that goes back to the fish. Along with the fish and their waste, microbes play a key role in the nutrition of the plants. This beneficial bacterium gathers in the spaces between the roots of the plant and converts the fish waste and the solids into substances the plants can use to grow. The result is a great collaboration between aquaculture and gardening.

The fish waste provides organic food for the rising plants and the plants naturally filter the water in which the fish live. The beneficial bacteria exist on each moist surface of an Aquaponic system. They convert the ammonia from the fish waste that is toxic to the fish and hopeless to the plants, first into nitrites and then into nitrates. The nitrates are moderately harmless to the fish and most importantly, they make terrific plant food. The worms change the solid waste and decaying plant matter in your Aquaponic system into vermicompost.

Advantages of Aquaponics:

Aquaponics measured a sustainable production system. It presents a series of valuable features of the environment. Some of the benefits are the following:

Read: Poultry Farming Loan and Application Process.

Aquaponics design:

How Aquaponics Works

Aquaponics is the successful combination of the practices of aquaculture and hydroponics to create a sustainable, self-sufficient ecosystem that can be harvested like a farm.  In order to make an Aquaponics system, an aquaculture subsystem and a hydroponics subsystem must first be created, along with the addition of bacteria.

Aquaponics system recirculates water from a fish tank through a vegetable grows bed. Nutrients from the fish waste feed the plants, and the plants filter the water to maintain the fish healthy. The two major components of the system are the fish tank and the grow beds with a small pump moving water between the two.

Components of an Aquaponics Farm:

There are many components of an Aquaponics farm.  In aquaculture tanks, waste formed by the fish in the tank will sink to the bottom and, unless removed, become toxic in larger concentrations.  This waste, however, contains many nutrients that support plant growth.  So, plants are added to the bottom of the tank, consuming the waste from the fish and producing food that the fish can later eat.  The end result is a productive cross between aquaculture and hydroponics — Aquaponics.  The mechanism of a typical subsistence Aquaponics system includes:

Rearing Tank: Fish are raised and fed into the tank.

Settling Basin: A component that catches uneaten food and detached biofilms, as well as settling out fine particulates.

Biofilter: An area where bacteria can change ammonia and waste into various nitrates that plants can use as nutrients.

Hydroponics Subsystem: A portion of the system where plants are developed from excess nutrients in the water.

Sump: The lowest position in the system.  Water flows to this Sump point and is then pumped back into the system.

Types of Aquaponics Systems:

These are the four common components of every Aquaponics system:

  1. Aquarium (fish tank).
  2. Grow bed for plants.
  3. A method of transporting water from the fish tank to the grow bed (water pumps are often used).
  4. A method to drain water from the grow bed back into the fish tank (pipes or siphons are often used).

Choose a Media-Based Design:

There are 3 different styles of systems used in Aquaponics for growing plants. The three different systems are DWC (deep-water culture), NFT (nutrient film technique) and media –based. The first two systems are borrowed from hydroponics and are a bit more costly and advanced.

For beginners to Aquaponics, it’s extremely recommended that you choose a media-based Aquaponics system design. There are some reasons for this:

Read: Backyard Fish Farming Guide.

Use a Basic Flood & Drain Design:

Out of all the layout designs within a media-based Aquaponics system design, the flood and drain design are the simplest and most common for home-based aquaponic gardeners.

The most important benefits of this system are:

Make sure that the grow bed is correct:

One of the mainly important components of an Aquaponics system design is the area where you grow your plants, so you need to know how to choose the right Aquaponics grow bed.

It’s not as easy as just getting a large plastic box, filling it up with produce media and then planting your seeds. You need to make sure that the size is ideal for plant development, the material doesn’t affect anything in the system, and that it’s strong enough to withstand the downward force of the medium, plants and water flow.

Choose your ideal location for Aquaponics Design:

The location of your Aquaponics system rests upon the kind of climate you live in and how much obtainable space you have. In a mostly year-round climate, it would be appropriate to base your Aquaponics system in the backyard, but for those who are not as fortunate to have such nice weather, there are several other options:

A 1,000 liter (264 US Gallons) tank in your Aquaponics system will maintain between 50 and 80 fish. That will support between 1,200 liters (317 US Gallons) and 1,800 liters (475 US Gallons) of growing beds taken that the grow beds are about 300 millimeter (12 inches) deep.

A system made up of 1x 1,000 liter tanks and two 600 liter grows beds will require at least 18 meters square (200 square feet). That is a 3 m x 6 m (10 ft x 20 ft). It would maintain say 50 fish and a growing area of 4 square meters (44 square feet).

Disadvantages of Aquaponics:

Aquaponics system also has certain disadvantages.

Read: Terrace Garden Planting Ideas and Tips.

The above Pic source: Wikimedia Commons.


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