AquaPete wrote:
Given all other parameters (light, temperature, humidity, pH, etc) are the same the limiting factor for plant growth in AP is the nutrient level (the topic of this thread). Which is why commercial setups focus on lettuces and herbs as they only require an EC (electro-conductivity) of around 1.6 for optimum growth. And is why tonics such as Seasol are added.
Yes and no.... Seasol is added as a trace element supplement... not as a "nitrogen" source...
In fact Seasol is low in all three NPK measures...
We need to be careful when we talk "nutrients"....
In hydro... nutrients are a mixture of water soluble trace element compounds, essentially chemical "salts", typically "chorides, sulphates etc"... which readily disassociate into "ionic" form... which is what EC reads...
And a source of nitrogen, sometimes as a "nitrate" compound, sometimes as urea... as is typically the case in 2 part nutrient mixes...
In the latter case the urea breaksdown into an ammonia based compound, which just as in AP is then converted to "nitrates"...
I would contend that in fact, in both hydro, aquaponics, or even in soil.... it's principally the "nitrate" provision that drives plant growth.... the provision, while necessary, of trace elements are somewhat secondary.... and more relevant to plant species, particularly flowering, fruiting, seeding plants...
Most lettuce, asian greens etc, really only require sufficient "nitrates" and iron... hence their suggested low EC reading...
Along with fast growth turn-around and market availability, that's the reason many hydro operations concentrate on such plant species.... fast turn-around, almost fool-proof, low nutrient cost, low management...
And most hydro operations are dedicated to only one or a few plant species... unless very large operations...
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My AP has is currently around 1.5 EC and pH around 6.0 and is giving great growth to my mature chives and sage, young tomato and lettuce. The oregano is finally growing too. Only input is BYAP fish food and Perth water. Simple.
I keep my Hydro system around 1.8 to 2.6 EC and pH around 6.0 as well. We've been overrun with cucumbers for the last month and the passionfruit is taking over the place. The capsicum is twice as high and has twice as much fruit as the soil based plants. And the strawberry plant is sprouting runners all over the place. Inputs to this system are water top up and pH adjust daily, new solution every two weeks, top-up of solution when EC gets low. Slightly complex.
No arguement from me regarding preferred pH range in hydro or AP... it's simply a proven fact that trace element uptake occurs best within the suggested pH range...
But as you point out... hydro requires nutrient mix & water replacement... seperate plant growth areas... and regular maintenance and monitoring...
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The different technologies are different 'animals' with different, albeit similar, inputs and outputs. I guess people get into AP or Hydro for their own reasons but if you're only interested in plants I'd have to ask, why bother with the fish?
Again, yes and no Pete.... the inputs are different, in form, and particularly in terms of management and time... in hydro you need to mix chemical nutrients, (now becoming very expensive), and periodically replace them...
In aquaponics... we just feed our fish... and perhaps, very occasionally, add a bit of chelated iron and/or seasol...
In hydroponics... we tend to grow a single species in a "grow area"...
In AP... I grow ALL my vegetables in a single growth area (growbed)... with minimal water top-ups... minimal (to none) monitoring and maintenance....
With quick growth, good yield and virtually no fuss.... and without the need for "spent " nutrient disposale...
And I get the bonus of fish added to my diet...
On a commercial scale, hydro operations are quite capital intensive to setup, maintain and manage... but have an accepted and almost gauranteed market...
"Commercial AP" on the other hand... while perhaps similar in capital investment to startup... has much lower running costs, management and on-going costs... but has a somewhat undefined market...
For backyard food production... unless you're prepared to grow your own seedlings and run mixed batch plants in hydro... aquaponics is just a "no-brainer" in terms of cost, simplicity and management...
Commercially... IMO... there is a very strong case for considering aquaponics, particularly the UVI raft methodology...
P.S... I think I can claim some hydroponic knowledge, even at a copmmercial scale... and from my experience... EC, TDS etc hydro readings... don't mean diddle-squat in relation to aquaponics... simply because they measure "variables" that just either aren't present in AP, or are in a different form...
I haven't used my Bluelab in a couple of years... other than to take a reading every now and then whenever this type of "question" is raised...
In all that time... I've never been able to compare the EC readings in AP systems with anything I've seen or experienced in hydro... but my plants are htriving and growing .... just as quickly..