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Integrated recycling systems
One of the largest problems with freshwater
aquaculture is that it can use a million gallons of water
per acre (about 1 m³ of water per m²) each year.
Extended water purification systems allow for the reuse (recycling)
of local water.
The largest-scale pure fish farms use a system derived (admittedly
much refined) from the New Alchemy Institute in the 1970s.
Basically, large plastic fish tanks are placed in a greenhouse.
A hydroponic bed is placed near, above or between them. When
tilapia are raised in the tanks, they are able to eat algae,
which naturally grows in the tanks when the tanks are properly
fertilized.
The tank water is slowly circulated to the hydroponic beds
where the tilapia waste feeds a commercial plant crops. Carefully
cultured microorganisms in the hydroponic bed convert ammonia
to nitrates, and the plants are fertilized by the nitrates
and phosphates. Other wastes are strained out by the hydroponic
media, which doubles as an aerated pebble-bed filter.
This system, properly tuned, produces more edible protein
per unit area than any other. A wide variety of plants can
grow well in the hydroponic beds. Most growers concentrate
on herbs (e.g. parsley and basil), which command premium prices
in small quantities all year long. The most common customers
are restaurant wholesalers.
Since the system lives in a greenhouse, it adapts to almost
all temperate climates, and may also adapt to tropical climates.
The main environmental impact is discharge of water that must
be salted to maintain the fishes' electrolyte balance. Current
growers use a variety of proprietary tricks to keep fish healthy,
reducing their expenses for salt and waste water discharge
permits. Some veterinary authorities speculate that ultraviolet
ozone disinfectant systems (widely used for ornamental fish)
may play a prominent part in keeping the Tilapia healthy with
recirculated water.
A number of large, well-capitalized ventures in this area
have failed. Managing both the biology and markets is complicated.
Reference:
Freshwater Aquaculture: A Handbook for Small Scale Fish
Culture in North America, by William McLarney
Integrated
recycling systems
Irrigation
ditch or pond systems
Cage
system
Classic
fry farming
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