I guys, just got my barrelponics system together last week and have had it cycyling fishlessly. Today here in Indiana it reached 80 outside and when I got home looked at my water temp and it was 99.5. Just wondering is that to much temp for fish to live in? I am a newbie and the system is located in a greenhouse, I'm thinking that I may need to buy some shade clothe, but want your opinoins first. I did have my vents closed all day cause I thought it was gonna rain, but the rain never showed up.
Brent
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A barrel ponics system is also pretty small and therefore the temperature will swing more quickly. Yes shade cloth will help but also opening up the greenhouse as much as possible for the summer will not only keep the water cooler but probably make it possible to grow plants. Keep in mind if the water temp in the greenhouse got to 99, imagine what the air temp must have gotten to in order to raise the thermals mass of the water up to 99!!!
I know of fish that can survive the water getting to the 90's but as Sylvia says, there won't be much dissolved oxygen in the water at that temp and any little thing going wrong will kill the fish quickly.
You can make bigger fish tanks using cattle panels an pond liner, kinda a round tall mesh tank.
and now I'm experimenting with ways to use cattle panels and chain link fence rails/hardware to make grow beds with either HDPE plastic or pond liner (pond liner needs a bit of extra something though.)
Hi Brent,
In a new system when fish are small and their O2 demands are little you can get by with very high temps, lulling us into a false sense of complacency, however, as time goes by and your fish are growing, fish floating on the surface will bring us back to reality. Avoid feeding fish when temperature peaks, use shading, using a fan/ice/electrical cooling, and anything you can think of to keep fish alive. Ap forces us to think "outside the box"!
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