January-February 2009

Aquaculture Irrigation Combination

Newly emerging pond system reclaims wastewater for hydroponics, fisheries, and endlessly renewable fuel.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By David Engle

Comments

Call it aquaculture efficiency or, perhaps better, ultra-everything efficiency-conserving freshwater is only the first-stage benefit here. Beyond this comes water reclamation for reuse, then tightly integrated energy efficiency (virtually, all free, low-tech solar), and next, food production efficiency, free fertilizer byproduct efficiency, bounteous biomass production efficiency surpassing—by at least two- or three-fold—any other known biomass source, and, at the end, a virtually unlimited loop of water recycling efficiency.

Properly speaking, the system itself is called the integrated modular production system (IMPS). Just now it is being implemented at one pilot site to relieve water-challenged cattle feedlots in Texas, and is gaining a foothold internationally. Its inventor Clifford Fedler, a professor of civil engineering and associate dean at the graduate school at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, coined the name in the course of spending a dozen years testing and developing it.

Advertisement

Fedler’s IMPSs essentially take self-cleaning wastewater treatment ponds and equip them with hydroponics. Added in the latter stages are tertiary ponds in which, he explains, “the water has been naturally denitrified by the right combination of plants and sunlight,” sufficient to support pools teeming with fish and enormous, almost hard-to-believe aquaculture crops. 

How IMPSs Evolved, Operate
Fedler first got the design idea two decades ago while chatting with the man who had devised a predecessor version, Ray Dinges (then nearly 90 years old). Back in the early 1960s, Dinges had dug some basic, multi-stage ponds for a south Texas farm. Hearing about his concept, Fedler quickly grasped its potential for wastewater treatment, and better water recycling of all kinds. The key, he realized, would be simply “to ensure, in the anaerobic portion, a deeper section of the first pond,” excavated “down to more than 15 feet in total depth.” Dimensions for the adjacent ponds can be more flexibly varied as needed, once the basic facultative depth is right. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*