Showing posts with label greenhouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greenhouse. Show all posts

20 October 2013

Aquaponics' Applications [1]


Educational Applications of Aquaponics
credit to Nelson Pade website


Aquaponics and hydroponics are both excellent means of demonstrating many principles of science, agriculture, math and business in all grade levels and for home schooling. Applications of these technologies are only limited by ones imagination.


A unit in hydroponics or aquaponics enforces practical uses of chemistry, mathematics, physics, economics and engineering. The monitoring and care of a hydroponic or aquaponic system by students helps instill a sense of responsibility, inspires creativity and creates excitement in the learning environment.


A small aquaponic garden can sit on a counter top and be used to demonstrate botany, horticulture, hydroponics (soil less plant culture), plant science, nutrition, physiology and care, nutrient and pH testing, pH relationships, plant usage of nutrients, seed germination, photosynthesis and light and plant development.


An aquaponic system combines hydroponics with aquaculture in a recirculating system. In addition to the plant sciences, aquaponics incorporates and demonstrates many of natures natural cycles, nitrification, biology, fish anatomy and nutrition and high-tech agriculture.


A unit in hydroponics or aquaponics can be started at the beginning of a semester and run through the entire semester, allowing the educator to present the individual concepts and lessons as the plants and fish develop and grow. A small hydroponic or aquaponic system can sit on a spare counter top. Larger systems can be placed on the floor of a classroom, in a windowsill or a greenhouse.
  

17 June 2013

Aquaponics' Advantages - Commercially

credit to http://centerforaquaponics.com

Aquaponic systems possess many attractive commercial applications, as well as environmental and human health benefits, making them ideal for future use in developing regions of the world. Quantifiable results include:


• Additive water conservation benefits of recirculating aquaculture and hydroponics combined into an integrated waste free system. With uncertainty regarding water supplies and the population carrying capacity of arid regions of the world, water conservation practices may result in aquaponics replacing more traditional forms of food production. Additionally, the plant and microbial remediation of the fish effluent (waste) prevents environmental contamination (eutrophication) common with many forms of aquaculture.


• A controlled-environment greenhouse operation greatly increases the reliability of production while reducing the risk of environmental degradation such as non-native species introduction which is prevalent with other forms of agriculture. Through the prevention of greenhouse pest outbreaks the need for synthetic pesticides has been eliminated.


• Combining aquaculture and hydroponics technologies has demonstrated the potential to exceed the productivity and profitability of independently operated systems for a given resource constraint (land, water, capital).


• Unlike warm blooded food stocks, cultured aquatic species are not considered high probability vectors of zoonotic diseases to humans. They require fewer inputs (feed and time) than other livestock. The feed conversion ratio and carbon footprint for farmed fish is significantly less than other sources for animal protein.


• The technologies employed to run an aquaponics operation can be primitive and produced from a large range of readily available (post-consumer) materials. This lowers the overall environmental footprint of the design and broadens the availability of the technology to poorer regions of the world.

09 April 2011

Aquaponics Technology

Harmonising Nature and Technology with Aquaponics

 

Born from the abstract philosophy of ecocentric ideals, aquaponics has emerged at the very frontier of agricultural technology. Yet, many years after the modern concept was first realised it has yet to receive the commercial recognition that might unlock its true potential, writes Adam Anson, reporting for TheFishSite.
By definition, aquaponics is the symbiotic cultivation of plants and aquatic animals in a recirculating environment. What it could offers to the world of aquaculture and agriculture is hugely promising, yet its name is rarely uttered within the food sector.

Advocates of aquaponics will say that a well balanced system could eradicate the costs of feed, supplements, continuous employment and waste management. In return, providing a variety of high quality, natural food products in high yielding quantities, but the reality of the technology in practise today adheres to few of these promises.

Modern aquaponic systems usually take place within greenhouses in order to maximise conditions. Water from the fish tank is filtered and recirculated by the biological methods of the plant. Ammonia, nitrates, nitrites, and phosphorus are stripped away and then the freshly cleansed water is recirculated back into the fish tanks. In return, nutrients generated from fish manure, algae, and decomposing fish feed - that would be toxic to the fish - serve as liquid fertilizer to hydroponically grown plants.

Essentially what these systems create is a self sustaining renewable system that does not require fertilisers for the plants, or fresh water for the aquatic animals. Current systems still require the addition of fresh salt and water replacement for evaporation and plant uptake, but in principle even these inputs could be eliminated.

Practical Uses

 

The use of aquaponics is not a new idea. Some people point back to ancient Egypt when tracing its roots, but a modern view of aquaculture stems from the permaculture movement that began as an agro-ecological design theory in the 1970's.
Developed by Australians Bill Mollison and David Holmgren, the idea was used to create stable agricultural systems. This was a result of their perception of a rapidly growing use of destructive industrial-agricultural methods. Since then, aquaponics has become a movement in its own right, serving as a model of sustainable food production for both land-based and aquatic organisms.

A recent publication by the National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service (ATTRA) took a look at present day aquaponic systems in the US and current research into the production methods. According to the publication, Aquaponics - Integration of Hydroponics with Aquaculture, farmers are beginning to take an increasing interest in aquaponics due to the low input and waste management costs and also the green credentials that they provide.

For all its potential aquaponics must currently utilise complex technology and the skilled ability of workers to simultaneously monitor, manage and market the different types of agricultural products it creates. However, recent innovations have transformed aquaponic technology into a viable system of food production, claims the report. These systems can be highly successful, but they still require special considerations. Knowledge of both hydroponics and aquaculture are currently essential to the management of an efficient system.

Not all plants are adapted to strive in aquaponic greenhouses. Similarly, nor are all aquatic creatures suited to aquaculture systems. Furthermore, those plants and fish often require specific conditions to strive. pH, temperature, oxygen levels, feed are just some of the aspects that must be managed for optimum growth. It is the bringing together of these right conditions that makes aquaponics so difficult.

On top of that, managers must also harmonise the stocking densities of the chosen plants and animals. "Matching the volume of fish tank water to volume of hydroponic media is known as component ratio", explain the report. "Early aquaponics systems were based on a ratio of 1:1, but 1:2 is now common and tank: bed ratios as high as 1:4 are employed. The variation in range depends on type of hydroponic system (gravel vs. raft), fish species, fish density, feeding rate and plant species,"

However, if the basic set up of the system is correct, yields can more than compensate for the hard work. Not only will the input cost be minimised, but also the value of the product will be high. Products should be well managed and healthy, containing no artificial chemicals, or hormones and having no adverse effect upon the environment.

The products can then be marketed as organic and in return demand a greater price at market. Unfortunately, although organic aquaculture has a valued market in many countries, there has been no global consensus on its definition and a US Department of Agriculture accredited organic label has remained entirely allusive. For this reason, a movement towards organic aquaculture has been severely hampered.

Not So Radical Thinking

 

In many ways, the complexity of aquaponics requires an understanding of all life. Farmers must engineer a whole ecosystem that caters for the need of all the plants and animals that live within it. And yet, essentially, aquaponics lets nature do what it does best by allowing it to deal with the complex underworld of interactions, soil structures and micro-organisms that we really do not understand. Rather than attempt to bend nature to the whim of human knowledge, it realigns our knowledge on its path.

Aquaponics should not be judged and seen merely through the green-tinted lenses of eco-friendly eyes, it should be mutually acknowledged for the advantages it can provide on economic, health and market grounds. Not only does it harmonise yield products, but it also fuses natural processes with highly advanced technological ones to derive the best of both.

Unfortunately, with the rapid advancement of huge machines and intensive monoculture operations behind us, it can be difficult to look again and see a natural agricultural process take its place and be just as efficient. But time and again, the problems that intensive operations encounter have proved difficult to overcome with manmade contraptions. Nature already has the answers to most of our problems, it is merely learning to see and listen to them that often hinders our advancement. 

credit to:
http://www.thefishsite.com/articles/570/harmonising-nature-and-technology-with-aquaponics

13 February 2011

Aquaponics Valentine

Happy Valentines Day

Here are 3 more Aquaponics reference links I would like to share.
Note: I will update the Reference page as soon as possible.

1. Hobby Aquaponics: Zero Effort Farming - Aquaponics
- http://www.squidoo.com/hobbyaquaponics

2. ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service
- http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/aquaponic.html

3. The Aquaponics Guidebook (an e-Book) at Blue Planet Green Living
- http://www.blueplanetgreenliving.com/2010/01/13/the-aquaponics-guidebook-an-e-book/

Have a nice day

21 January 2011

Aquaponics Facts

Aquaponics uses up to 90% less water than conventional farming does

Aquaponics is energy efficient: It requires up to 1/3 of the energy
other farming systems use.

Aquaponics can have up to 8 to 10 times more vegetable production in
the same amount of time and area than conventional gardens or farms.

Labor can be reduced as much as 40%, while useful byproducts are
created that can be used to farm other crops, trees, soil, water, and
energy.

Credit to 'fukuoka_farming'

Greenhouse growers and farmers are taking note of aquaponics for several reasons:

  • Hydroponic growers view fish-manured irrigation water as a source of organic fertilizer that enables plants to grow well.

  • Fish farmers view hydroponics as a biofiltration method to facilitate intensive recirculating aquaculture.

  • Greenhouse growers view aquaponics as a way to introduce organic hydroponic produce into the marketplace, since the only fertility input is fish feed and all of the nutrients pass through a biological process.

  • Food-producing greenhouses — yielding two products from one production unit — are naturally appealing for niche marketing and green labeling.

  • Aquaponics can enable the production of fresh vegetables and fish protein in arid regions and on water-limited farms, since it is a water re-use system.

  • Aquaponics is a working model of sustainable food production wherein plant and animal agriculture are integrated and recycling of nutrients and water filtration are linked.

  • In addition to commercial application, aquaponics has become a popular training aid on integrated bio-systems with vocational agriculture programs and high school biology classes.
Credit to 'attra.ncat.org'

In addition, i've updated the Aquaponics Extra page's Special Topic: Permaculture.
Permaculture and Aquaponics can combine and focuses truly sustainable closed-loop
systems that provide all the needs for the system with in the system itself.