Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Tilapia Diseases 101
As a result, tilapia growers worldwide did not historically practice clean culture methods. Moreover, they did not generally implement the biosecurity measures that had become standard in industries that grew less disease-resistant fish such as trout and salmon. In other words, there was no apparent penalty for being careless - or so it seemed.
Read more: http://www.americulture.com/Disease.htm
When fish are sick I generally add
enough salt to bring the concentration up to 3.0 ppt.
While the fish stores may try to sell you various cures, my experience is if it takes anything more than salt your fish were probably doomed to die anyway.
Some people go higher then 3.0 ppt, but that's what I use. I have a meter so it's pretty easy to be accurate but you can go by weight. For example if you have a 100 gallon system you will add about 2.5 lb of salt. I did a little math. 5.5 cups = 2.5 lb.
So get some plain Solar water softener salt and dump in 5.5 cups for each 100 gallons of water in your system. Toss it in the sump tank so as not to hurt the fish. You can change out some water to bring the level down to about 1ppt after the fish stop dieing. You should not leave the salt that high forever because it's not good for some plants and the pathogens you wish to get rid of can adapt to the high salinity, but a little is good. I like to use Sea-90 to keep trace minerals in the system.. You could use Sea-90 instead of Solar water softener salt, but it's more expensive.
While the fish stores may try to sell you various cures, my experience is if it takes anything more than salt your fish were probably doomed to die anyway.
Some people go higher then 3.0 ppt, but that's what I use. I have a meter so it's pretty easy to be accurate but you can go by weight. For example if you have a 100 gallon system you will add about 2.5 lb of salt. I did a little math. 5.5 cups = 2.5 lb.
So get some plain Solar water softener salt and dump in 5.5 cups for each 100 gallons of water in your system. Toss it in the sump tank so as not to hurt the fish. You can change out some water to bring the level down to about 1ppt after the fish stop dieing. You should not leave the salt that high forever because it's not good for some plants and the pathogens you wish to get rid of can adapt to the high salinity, but a little is good. I like to use Sea-90 to keep trace minerals in the system.. You could use Sea-90 instead of Solar water softener salt, but it's more expensive.
Monday, April 29, 2013
crystal-clear water
Because of the crystal-clear water, Flathead Lake in Montana seems shallow, but in reality is 370 feet in depth.
Turquoise Pool, Chile
Turquoise Pool, Chile
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Monday, April 1, 2013
Billboard Tarps
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Quote of the day
While reading through the AP (aquaponics) forums this morning I came across this from Vlad. It made me laugh. Vlad has a way of hitting the nail right on the head. This was in response to a questionable ad -
"...Well, OK maybe it's even a bit less hokey...somebody please just shoot me in the fucking head if I ever start rambling about how some overly priced, energy intensive AP system is going to feed some poor backwater village in the middle of the African desert...I mean it's nice for middle class white folks to have a 'feel good' hobby and all, but when folks use the very real and legitimate suffering and misfortune to tug at the heart-strings of Mr. and Mrs. Jones of Lakewood in order to sell them something...it kinda gets my goat. Sorry for the rant..."
Vlad and I are on the same page concerning AP. Quoting Vlad again (sic) "Aquaponics is a romantic attraction".
You may wonder where my allegiance lies. This is of course a blog about aquaponics. I do like aquaponics, but it's not the only way to garden (Bioponics or Wicking beds may better suit your needs), and by no means is it cheap or as easy as some would have you believe.
A well managed AP system can out perform a soil based garden, but well managed is the crux of the matter and the term that requires definition.
In any case don't let the lure of technology lead you into grand ideas of easy profits and abundant crops of fish and vegetables. It may not be rocket science, but it is a science that requires a fair amount of attention.
"...Well, OK maybe it's even a bit less hokey...somebody please just shoot me in the fucking head if I ever start rambling about how some overly priced, energy intensive AP system is going to feed some poor backwater village in the middle of the African desert...I mean it's nice for middle class white folks to have a 'feel good' hobby and all, but when folks use the very real and legitimate suffering and misfortune to tug at the heart-strings of Mr. and Mrs. Jones of Lakewood in order to sell them something...it kinda gets my goat. Sorry for the rant..."
Vlad and I are on the same page concerning AP. Quoting Vlad again (sic) "Aquaponics is a romantic attraction".
You may wonder where my allegiance lies. This is of course a blog about aquaponics. I do like aquaponics, but it's not the only way to garden (Bioponics or Wicking beds may better suit your needs), and by no means is it cheap or as easy as some would have you believe.
A well managed AP system can out perform a soil based garden, but well managed is the crux of the matter and the term that requires definition.
In any case don't let the lure of technology lead you into grand ideas of easy profits and abundant crops of fish and vegetables. It may not be rocket science, but it is a science that requires a fair amount of attention.
Friday, March 15, 2013
Automation
Comment by Iowa Aquaponics -
- We've created a series of tutorials with some of these features using the Arduino and Google's cloud infrastructure.
Online Temperature and Humidity
Real-Time Graphing Online
Online Relay Control
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