How aquaponics changes the game
Waist-high aquaponics gardening eliminates weeds, back strain and small animal access to your garden.
Reuse resources currently considered “waste”. In aquaponics there is no more toxic run-off from either hydroponics or aquaculture.
Aquaponics uses only 1/10th of the water of soil-based gardening, and even less water than hydroponics or recirculating aquaculture.
Watering is integral to an aquaponics system. You can’t under-water or over-water.
Fertilizing is also integral to an aquaponics system. You can’t over-fertilize or under-fertilize.
Gardening chores are cut down dramatically or eliminated. The aquaponics grower is able to focus on the enjoyable tasks of feeding the fish and tending and harvesting the plants.
Aquaponics EggplantInstead of using dirt or toxic chemical solutions to grow plants, aquaponics uses highly nutritious fish effluent that contains all the required nutrients for optimum plant growth. Instead of discharging water, aquaponics uses the plants and the media in which they grow to clean and purify the water, after which it is returned to the fish tank. This water can be reused indefinitely and will only need to be replaced when it is lost through transpiration and evaporation. Two primary methods of aquaponics growing are most widely in use today.
The raft based aquaponics growing system uses a foam raft that is floating in a channel filled with fish effluent water that has been through filtration to remove solid wastes. Plants are placed in holes in the raft and the roots dangle freely in the water. This method is most appropriate for growing salad greens and other fast growing, relatively low-nutrient plants.
The second method is called media based aquaponics because plants are grown in inert planting media (gravel, expanded clay pellets, coir, etc.). The media provides both the biological (ammonia based waste) and mechanical (solid waste) filtration, so requires far less maintenance than raft-based systems. Large, fruiting plants are also grown much more successfully in media based systems than in rafts.
The third method is called hybrid aquaponics, which is a combination of the two. The media beds become the pre-filter for the solid waste before the water enters the raft systems. This hybrid system style is the focus of The Aquaponic Source’s AquaBundance systems because it provides planting flexibility, high productivity and low maintenance.