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Information
Village
Aquaponics
- a select article from the Aquaponics Journal
by John Pade
My name is
John Pade and I am hooked on aquaponics. While most of my days
are spent working on disseminating information on hydroponics
and working with clients on hydroponic projects, what I really
want to do is work 100 percent on aquaponic projects. Over the
years my partner, Rebecca Nelson, and I have gathered
information about from researchers, hands-on growing, hobbyists,
aquaculturalists, commercial hydroponic growers and
manufacturers of greenhouses. We put that knowledge together
with properly manufactured components and come up with
practical, commercial viable, food producing machines. When that
food producing machine uses fish to provide the nutrients, it is
generally called aquaponics. When an aquaponic system is used
to provide nutrition, in the form of fish and vegetables, to
people who live nearby, I call it
Village Aquaponics.
What is Village Aquaponics?
You probably
know that aquaponics is the combination of hydroponics and
recirculating aquaculture. The reference
Village Aquaponics
refers to an
aquaponic system specifically set up for the purpose of
providing a protein crop (the fish) and a vegetable, herb or
fruit crop (the plants) to a specific region surrounding the
operation. Commercial transportation of the food produced in a
village aquaponic
system should not be necessary. Those living near the system
should be close enough to pick up the fish and produce
themselves. The accessible radius could vary depending on
where the system is located. In a remote village the access may
be by foot trails limiting the area the system can serve. In
downtown Singapore, a rooftop system may service a population
located very nearby. This could be the case in many of the
world’s larger cities where hundreds of these systems can
collectively provide a great deal of food that doesn’t have to
be commercially transported into the city from great distances.
In the United States and many other nations where public and
private transportation is available on an established network of
roads, small commercial aquaponics systems of a ½ acre or less
can be very profitable. The term
village
can refer to
a small remote community in Panama or Honduras, but it can also
refer to an aquaponic system that is providing fresh fish and
produce for the guests of a 5 star beach resort on an island
that has limited agricultural resources.
Can Aquaponics Replace Hydroponics?
I believe it
can, I believe it must and I believe it will. Yes, of course,
many will ask, why? Hydroponics can produce so much in a very
small space using a fraction of the water, machinery and labor
that field produce needs. Also, hydroponics, when done in a
screened clear poly roofed greenhouse frame, can be herbicide
and pesticide free and not pollute the soil and ground water.
In a hot climate, screened walls and a clear rain cover work
well and in a cold climate clear walls, heaters and clear poly
roofs on a greenhouse frame make production possible
year-round. Well, all these advantages of hydroponics that make
it an option for feeding tomorrow’s world also apply to
village aquaponics.
There are
two clear advantages that aquaponics has over hydroponics: 1.
the nutrient source comes from fish waste and is, therefore,
organic and 2. aquaponics provides something that hydroponics
does not, a protein crop. Now, it is true that they both need
an input, fish food in aquaponics and fertilizer in
hydroponics. It is easier to provide fish food than to provide
the myriad of chemical fertilizers that hydroponics needs. I do
recognize the contribution hydroponics has made to the world’s
food supply and I think it will continue to be an important
source of food in the future. I also think improvements will be
made in nutrient sources for hydroponics in the near future,
making it less dependent on the manufacture of chemical
fertilizers. Improvements in the manufacture of fish food have
resulted in the availability of fish food that is plant-based
and has no fish meal or animal by-products in it. Also, I see
that many countries throughout the world have a well developed
aquaculture industry already in place. This well established
industry provides the perfect skilled labor force to manage the
aquaculture portion of an aquaponic greenhouse operation. A
network to distribute fish food is already in place so the start
up of an aquaponic system can be easier in many cases than
starting a hydroponic operation.
Is Aquaponics Commercially Viable?
There are
very few commercial aquaponic operations compared to the number
of commercial hydroponic operations. This is true. But I
believe the research that has been extensively done is making
aquaponics a viable method of agriculture and research will
continue which will refine it even more.
We
are not starting from ground zero either. Aquaponics is so
similar to hydroponics that much of the knowledge gained over
the past decades is transferable to aquaponics. Another revenue
stream that aquaponics can generate is from giving tours of this
unique food growing system. While the clickity-clack of dosing
devices used in hydroponics can put you to sleep, the active
vibrancy of the fish in an aquaponics system seems to really
draw a crowd.
I have been
involved with agri-tourism in both hydroponic and aquaponic
greenhouses and I can assure you that an aquaponic growing
system fascinates people far more than a hydroponic greenhouse
tour. The aquaponic system lends itself well to educational
groups as it is a complete living system that demonstrates many
science related subjects. Educators can develop an entire
semester’s curriculum around a visit to an aquaponic
greenhouse.
The work
that Dr. James Rakocy and associates has done at the
Agricultural Experiment Station located at the University of the
Virgin Islands, St. Croix, USVI, over the past 25 years or so
has proven aquaponics works well. The application of this
knowledge at the Crop Diversification Center in Alberta, Canada
has had impressive results. Not only are leafy vegetable crops
being grown but high nutrient demanding vegetables and fruit
crops are doing as well as they do in hydroponics, sometimes
better. Valuable information also comes from the many aquaponic
growers who contribute to the process by trial and error. These
days the errors are fewer and the trials more successful as
innovative new growers take advantage of the knowledge developed
by others. The
Aquaponics Journal
has become the
voice of aquaponics
and is a major contributor of information to the aquaponics
industry.
The Future?
The
aquaponics industry will develop rapidly for both salt and fresh
water fish and crops. Many different organizations, both
private and public, will take up this technological quest with a
passion dictated by their own particular needs. The resulting
improvements will have a far reaching world-wide effect on the
aquaponics industry. It has been said that visionary thinking
is the dreams of fools. To that I say let the fools sleep
soundly, for we are going to need the results of their dreams if
we are to meet tomorrow’s demand for food world-wide.
About the Author:
John Pade is a consultant in the hydroponic and aquaponic
industry and is co-publisher of Aquaponics Journal. He can be
reached by email at pade@aquaponics.com or by phone at
209-742-6869
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