:: image via City Farmer
Tilapia is a common fish used in aquaculture, due to it's large size, rapid growth, and palatability. Further explanations gives more creedence to their use, via Wikipedia: "This is due to their omnivorous diet, mode of reproduction (the fry do not pass through a planktonic phase), tolerance of high stocking density, and rapid growth. In some regions the fish can be put out in the rice fields when rice is planted, and will have grown to edible size (12–15 cm, 5–6 inches) when the rice is ready for harvest."
:: image via Wikipedia
The potential for this fish is amazing - and differs from some of the more popular 'farmed' fish: Again via Wikipedia: "One recent estimate for the FAO puts annual production of tilapia at about 1.5 million tonnes, a quantity comparable to the annual production of farmed salmon and trout. Unlike salmon, which rely on high-protein feeds based on fish or meat, commercially important tilapiine species eat a vegetable or cereal based diet. Tilapias raised in inland tanks or channels are considered safe for the environment, since their waste and disease should be contained and not spread to the wild."
:: image via Tilapia Vita Farms
Some additional info can be gleaned from Edgar F. Sanchez of Orlando, Florida, proprietor of the Tilapia Vita Farms who has a website outlining his personal home-scale aquaculture program.
:: images via Tilapia Vita Farms
Another pair of small-scale examples are found via Treehugger - the first a 2007 summary of aquaponics (the hybrid of aquaculture and hydroponics). From the site: "Basically, the process involves fish, plants and bacteria. The cycle consists of fish by-products (or to the less delicate … ‘poo’) being pumped into grow beds filled with gravel. Bacteria convert the ammonia from the ‘fish poo’ into nitrites and then other good bacteria convert the nitrites in nitrates, which are used by the plants as nutrients. The beauty of the system is that a balance occurs in the eco-system whereby the water is sufficiently filtered by the plants who inturn obtain all the necessary nutrients from the fish."
:: Aquaponics - image via Treehugger
A more recent post via Treehugger, of which the "...Urban Aquaculture Center (UAC) in Milwaukee. The UAC intends to combine a 150,000-sq ft indoor aquaculture/agriculture facility with educational facilities, sustainable farming exhibits, a restaurant and fish market."
:: image via Treehugger
Some additional technical info, from the UAC website: "The Great Lakes WATER Institute and Growing Power are conducting tests on the ability of plants, worms and bacteria to remediate water in a perch grow-out system. The results thus far are encouraging. Adult perch have done well in a greenhouse environment with only a pump to move water to gravel beds containing plants and beneficial nitrifying bacteria. This system, which closely mimics nature, shows promise."
:: image via UAC
While the 'home' scale label of the above is debatable when you consider the land-print required for this endeavor, some more pictures of Mathieu Lehanneur’s Local River (previously on L+U here). I dismissed the concept a bit in the previous post - and definitely double this resistance with incorporation of sea-snakes in the tanks. There's snakes in the house!!! Someone get Sam Jackson.
:: images via Dezeen
Finally, acknowledgement of one of the pioneers of aquaculture (and many things sustainability, before it had a name) is John Todd. A posting in Inhabitat featured Todd and his receipt of the Buckminster Fuller Challenge award. His winning proposal is entitled: "Comprehensive Design for a Carbon Neutral World: The Challenge of Appalachia, which lays out a strategy for transforming one and a half million acres of strip-mined lands in Appalachia into a harmonious self-sustaining community."
:: images via Inhabitat
Arguably, we wouldn't be having these conversations with the inspiration of Todd and his group of innovators from the 1970's. The idea of Todd's 'eco-machines' which are synonymous, sans trademark, to living machines - offer a glimpse of the ideas of the moder aquacultural movement. It will be interesting to see how these are adapted to increase production, reclaim wastes, adapt to climates, and also start becoming incorporated into more urban and dense areas. Sushi anyone?
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