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Thread: Nutrient burn?

  1. #1
    Members wh33t's Avatar
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    Nutrient burn?

    Another quick question.

    Can plants in an Aquaponics system be "over-fertilized". This is a common problem with hydroponic set ups and even soil gardens when using artificial fertilizers, but can this also happen in an Aquaponics set up?
    Current Aquaponics System


    11 Gold Fish
    Aquarium = Custom 90 Gallon Raised Pond on casters
    Flower bed = Custom 4' x 8' Flood Table (Bell Siphon)
    Bio Filter = 6 Gallon Polypropylene Tote with Hydroton (Bell Siphon)

  2. #2
    Moderator badflash's Avatar
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    No. The fish would die long before the plants would suffer.
    The best fertilizer is the farmer's shadow

  3. #3
    Members wh33t's Avatar
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    Quote Originally Posted by badflash
    No. The fish would die long before the plants would suffer.
    So do the plants ever get their optimum fertilizer needs? Excuse my novice-ness. I'm coming from a hydroponic and soil gardening background. In hydroponics you add chemical fertilizers in a specific concentration believed to be optimum for the plant. How is this optimum level hit in Aquaponics?
    Current Aquaponics System


    11 Gold Fish
    Aquarium = Custom 90 Gallon Raised Pond on casters
    Flower bed = Custom 4' x 8' Flood Table (Bell Siphon)
    Bio Filter = 6 Gallon Polypropylene Tote with Hydroton (Bell Siphon)

  4. #4
    Moderator urbanfarmer's Avatar
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    Some research has suggested that with enough water flow the plants will still be able to absorb the required nutrients even if the concentrations are lower than what is commonly suggested. That is why previously I had suggested to have constant water flow in the grow bed (in any form, just don't stop it). If you find a better answer to your question, please share. However, I don't think aquaponics has enough scientific research (or specifically applied therein) to have a conclusive answer yet.

  5. #5
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    the nutrient requirements for each type of plant vary, in hydroponics formulations are plant specific, water is maintained at a certain pH, temperature, and hardness with RO water being the preferred solution base. Tilapia require just the opposite of what is preferred by the plants; tilapia are from hard, alkaline water with a temperature in the mid to high 80's. while plants prefer soft slighly acid water in the 60's to low 70's temperature. so one or the other or both suffer from the conditions.
    in aquaponics it is quite frankly from everything i've read a crapshoot. the pH and hardness of the water are all over the place, the level of organics in various stages of decomposition is extremely varied, the type of food fed to the fish determines to an extent, what comes out the other end. the type of fish and how they process the food makes a difference, a herbivorious vs. carnivorious animals have different digestive systems, different natural flora and fauna in their intestines process and obsorb nutrients differently. then throw in some red wriggler earthworms into the mix and unless you have access to a lab with unlimited resources you have no idea what is in your water. so what you end up doing is to try to diagnose deficiencies by the symptoms, which by that time the damage is done to your crops. AP with high nitrates of course work great with plants that can tolerate wet feet and high levels of nitrogen do quite well with no chance of burning: i.e. lettuce and a couple of herbs. crops like tomatoes that don't like wet feet and will produce excess leggy foliage with substandard fruit are a different story, but still no burning. your hydroponics experience will come in handy with your knowledge of nutrient solutions. the trick is to find the nutrient balance without killing the fish. and that my friend is the challenge and fun of aquaponics.

  6. #6
    Members wh33t's Avatar
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    Quote Originally Posted by rfeiller
    the nutrient requirements for each type of plant vary, in hydroponics formulations are plant specific, water is maintained at a certain pH, temperature, and hardness with RO water being the preferred solution base. Tilapia require just the opposite of what is preferred by the plants; tilapia are from hard, alkaline water with a temperature in the mid to high 80's. while plants prefer soft slighly acid water in the 60's to low 70's temperature. so one or the other or both suffer from the conditions.
    in aquaponics it is quite frankly from everything i've read a crapshoot. the pH and hardness of the water are all over the place, the level of organics in various stages of decomposition is extremely varied, the type of food fed to the fish determines to an extent, what comes out the other end. the type of fish and how they process the food makes a difference, a herbivorious vs. carnivorious animals have different digestive systems, different natural flora and fauna in their intestines process and obsorb nutrients differently. then throw in some red wriggler earthworms into the mix and unless you have access to a lab with unlimited resources you have no idea what is in your water. so what you end up doing is to try to diagnose deficiencies by the symptoms, which by that time the damage is done to your crops. AP with high nitrates of course work great with plants that can tolerate wet feet and high levels of nitrogen do quite well with no chance of burning: i.e. lettuce and a couple of herbs. crops like tomatoes that don't like wet feet and will produce excess leggy foliage with substandard fruit are a different story, but still no burning. your hydroponics experience will come in handy with your knowledge of nutrient solutions. the trick is to find the nutrient balance without killing the fish. and that my friend is the challenge and fun of aquaponics.
    Thanks for the replies guys. I had a feeling it was a big of crap shoot kind of art. That's ok. That's how I prefer it
    Current Aquaponics System


    11 Gold Fish
    Aquarium = Custom 90 Gallon Raised Pond on casters
    Flower bed = Custom 4' x 8' Flood Table (Bell Siphon)
    Bio Filter = 6 Gallon Polypropylene Tote with Hydroton (Bell Siphon)

  7. #7
    Moderator urbanfarmer's Avatar
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    Quote Originally Posted by rfeiller
    the nutrient requirements for each type of plant vary, in hydroponics formulations are plant specific, water is maintained at a certain pH, temperature, and hardness with RO water being the preferred solution base. Tilapia require just the opposite of what is preferred by the plants; tilapia are from hard, alkaline water with a temperature in the mid to high 80's. while plants prefer soft slighly acid water in the 60's to low 70's temperature. so one or the other or both suffer from the conditions.
    in aquaponics it is quite frankly from everything i've read a crapshoot. the pH and hardness of the water are all over the place, the level of organics in various stages of decomposition is extremely varied, the type of food fed to the fish determines to an extent, what comes out the other end. the type of fish and how they process the food makes a difference, a herbivorious vs. carnivorious animals have different digestive systems, different natural flora and fauna in their intestines process and obsorb nutrients differently. then throw in some red wriggler earthworms into the mix and unless you have access to a lab with unlimited resources you have no idea what is in your water. so what you end up doing is to try to diagnose deficiencies by the symptoms, which by that time the damage is done to your crops. AP with high nitrates of course work great with plants that can tolerate wet feet and high levels of nitrogen do quite well with no chance of burning: i.e. lettuce and a couple of herbs. crops like tomatoes that don't like wet feet and will produce excess leggy foliage with substandard fruit are a different story, but still no burning. your hydroponics experience will come in handy with your knowledge of nutrient solutions. the trick is to find the nutrient balance without killing the fish. and that my friend is the challenge and fun of aquaponics.
    Yes, it is a bit of a crapshoot... but, some research is coming out slowly. That last statement I made was based on suggestions in research based by the University of Florida. I have also experienced it first hand in a very controlled AP system where I knew for a fact that I had very low levels of nutrients, yet I had phenomenal plant growth.

  8. #8
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    You do know at that high pH much of the nutrients will be bound up and not available to the plants. Dumping acid in the mix will create a high fluctuation of pH until the buffers are neutralized which is hell on both plants and animals. Either RO or DI with cation & anion resins will help you out, use potassium chloride, not sodium chloride to recharge the system.

  9. #9
    Moderator urbanfarmer's Avatar
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    I am not sure what you mean by the buffers are neutralized. Buffers occur as speciation of chemicals depending on the difference of their pKa value, and they are never neutralized. The acid you use to change the pH is the "buffer" problem most people observe. For instance, when people use citric acid, it has THREE speciations at close pH levels and will cause buffers whereas HCl or sulfuric acid will not. Of course, when you throw other chemicals in there from tap water, you can get other buffer effects you can't hope to calculate. Unionized distilled water is the best way to go, but most of us don't have the resources for that. RO water comes out ionized, typically. I'm not sure what anion/cation resins are, but I think you might mean the ionization of the water? Or is this a substance you have used in hydro before??

    Yes, certain nutrients precipitate at higher pH values; hence, the reason they are not available, but research conducted by UF for commercial applications showed differences in relative yields were not statistically significant. The nutrients were 5-10 times lower at different pH (including 8), and even at 8 the yields were fine. AP systems are quite complex with microorganisms we have yet to realize. Experimentally observed results that seem to defy our common, hypothetical, and theoretical knowledge is what really helps us understand AP better!

  10. #10
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    Re: Nutrient burn?

    cation and anion are resins used to exchange different elements replacing say calcium with a sodium ion. they are physical and are used frequently in the water softner and water purification processes with the final product in some exchange systems being hydrogen. a sodium ion exchange with say calcium ions is very common as home water softners.

    the buffers i was referring too can be alkaline or acidic. but the primary ones that are neutralized for the aquatic and horticultural industrial are the alkaline. the buffers are what causes the bouncing back of the pH readings, because the alkali has not been completely neutralized by the acid.

    it is not uncommon for if a pH is say 8.0 or higher when acid is added (organic matter such as peat with a 3.5-4ph or acids such as citric, sufuric or whatever) the pH will drop, many times only temporarilly, but will bounce back to 8.0 this is the result of the alkali buffers and requires more acid to be added which can replicate the bouncing several times before the acidic buffers stabilize at the lower pH you desire.

    of course multi passes of a lower nutrient solution will make more nutrients available to the plant, it's cumulative.

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