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Some very dwarf citrus might do ok for you. I've got some meyer lemon cuttings in aquaponics and I know of people who have had some small tangerines and perhaps a kumquat would be an appropriate size tree for aquaponics.
I've done papaya and banana but as Raychel and David Noted, they can get too big for easy handling. My supposedly Dwarf Banana plant grew over the roof and cracked a 100 gallon grow bed within about 6 months and of course they have hugely dense root systems so clogged the bed as well and after harvesting the bananas it was gut-busting work to remove the stump so I could repair the bed.
I would recommend doing research on dwarf varieties and if they will produce in the first year or two after planting, if not, then it may not be worth planting into prime aquaponic space.
Sherry I know mangoes papaya and banana all go nuts in aquaponics but beware as they take up the whole bed. I tried a blackberry but my ph is just to high. I have a kiwi going and am hoping they do well. strawberrie also do well if your ph is 7.0 and your nitrates are up for fruiting. Go for it and keep us posted.
All of these trees you talk about are very large and you would have to have a sky high greenhouse if you live in cold country. I had a papaya in a kind of grow bed did well was about 4 feet high the bed got over watered 2 days and the papaya rotted. As David says the root system would clog up the world. You could use the water from the fish to fertilize these trees as I do but in a system they are just too large.
Some very dwarf citrus might do ok for you. I've got some meyer lemon cuttings in aquaponics and I know of people who have had some small tangerines and perhaps a kumquat would be an appropriate size tree for aquaponics.
I've done papaya and banana but as Raychel and David Noted, they can get too big for easy handling. My supposedly Dwarf Banana plant grew over the roof and cracked a 100 gallon grow bed within about 6 months and of course they have hugely dense root systems so clogged the bed as well and after harvesting the bananas it was gut-busting work to remove the stump so I could repair the bed.
I would recommend doing research on dwarf varieties and if they will produce in the first year or two after planting, if not, then it may not be worth planting into prime aquaponic space.
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