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Hello Sylvia 18 degree celsius is 68 degree fahrenheit Dr James E. Rakocy rot in his book that the bacteri is daeing
below 18 degree celsius and hi is the expert in agrculture
manfred
I know cooler water slows down the bacteria but I grow channel catfish and they are still eating well down to about 65 F water and that doesn't cause me to have ammonia or nitrite spikes from my bacteria dieing off. People raising trout definitely manage Aquaponics in cool water so there has to be some bio-filter bacteria out there that function just fine below 68 F. Now if you were in a tropical place and the bacteria that colonize your system are suited to the more stable climate and the temp suddenly drops, that might be different.
In situations where the water warms and cools slowly, there is usually time for the bacteria to ramp up and down along with the fish feeding rates. Now once the water gets below 50 F, I would not be feeding since most fish wouldn't be eating anyway and the bacteria have definitely chilled out and a sudden return to higher temps will need to be accompanied by a slow ramp up of feeding so one does not get ahead of the bacteria re-populating.
Manfred Wille said:Hello Sylvia 18 degree celsius is 68 degree fahrenheit Dr James E. Rakocy rot in his book that the bacteri is daeing
below 18 degree celsius and hi is the expert in agrculture
manfred
I have a quick question about the rules of thumb - Is there a minimum water depth for fish tanks? I see that the grow beds need to be 12 inches, but I am not sure about the fish tank. I am thinking about raising tilapia or catfish and I am gearing up to start a small system. Most of the tanks I have found seem to be quite shallow. I think I read somewhere that you want a tank that is a least three feet deep, but I have seen lots of shorter tanks and small ponds that are very shallow.
Would a rubbermaid tank that is 25 inches work for fish tank? For example: http://www.rubbermaidforless.com/rubbermaid-4247-gallon-capacity-li...
I have a quick question about the rules of thumb - Is there a minimum water depth for fish tanks? I see that the grow beds need to be 12 inches, but I am not sure about the fish tank. I am thinking about raising tilapia or catfish and I am gearing up to start a small system. Most of the tanks I have found seem to be quite shallow. I think I read somewhere that you want a tank that is a least three feet deep, but I have seen lots of shorter tanks and small ponds that are very shallow.
Would a rubbermaid tank that is 25 inches work for fish tank? For example: http://www.rubbermaidforless.com/rubbermaid-4247-gallon-capacity-li...
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