

Mhays wrote:I missed this entirely on the first go-round - but our school uses a version of aquaponics to grow tomato seedlings for sale: we water with the waste water from the school's aquarium. I've taken this system to our house, and water all our potted plants when we change the water for the goldfish.
Technically, aquaponics is hydroponics with the fish living in the water system to provide nitrogen - so we're missing a step, but the effect is pretty much the same. I did a bunch of research on it; one reason it works so well is that fish are biologically different enough from us that we can't catch any of their diseases, even if there's fish waste ON the plants instead of in them.
Mhays wrote:I did a bunch of research on it; one reason it works so well is that fish are biologically different enough from us that we can't catch any of their diseases, even if there's fish waste ON the plants instead of in them.
stevez wrote:Mhays wrote:I missed this entirely on the first go-round - but our school uses a version of aquaponics to grow tomato seedlings for sale: we water with the waste water from the school's aquarium. I've taken this system to our house, and water all our potted plants when we change the water for the goldfish.
Technically, aquaponics is hydroponics with the fish living in the water system to provide nitrogen - so we're missing a step, but the effect is pretty much the same. I did a bunch of research on it; one reason it works so well is that fish are biologically different enough from us that we can't catch any of their diseases, even if there's fish waste ON the plants instead of in them.
There is (or at least used to be) a demonstration of this on a very large scale at Epcot in Orlando.
Rene G wrote:Mhays wrote:I did a bunch of research on it; one reason it works so well is that fish are biologically different enough from us that we can't catch any of their diseases, even if there's fish waste ON the plants instead of in them.
What you say about risk may well be generally true for aquarium fish (I don't know) but the rationale isn't. There are plenty of human diseases that can be transmitted by fish, some by the water they live in. There's even a name for such diseases: ichthyozoonoses. I'm no expert but I suspect the risk is quite low for those with normal immune systems who don't ingest the water or get it in wounds.