Best fisheries & aquaculture books according to redditors

We found 9 Reddit comments discussing the best fisheries & aquaculture books. We ranked the 3 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Fisheries & Aquaculture:

u/Swimmingbird3 · 5 pointsr/aquaponics

Recirculating Aquaculture 3^rd Edition by Timmons & Ebeling.

It's hardly a picture-book (900+ pages), and it's not extremely in-depth in any one subject, but it's an authority in aquaculture and should give you a firm grasp of optimal system design

u/hjras · 3 pointsr/aquaponics

I would guess the biggest difference comes from the type and content of feed rather than the metabolism of the species. If anything, the species might be more efficient or not at converting the feed to biomass, which decides if there is more or less solid waste required to be removed from the recirculating flow

If you can find the following book in a library or borrow it then it's worth a shot to search your specific question: https://www.amazon.com/Recirculating-Aquaculture-3rd-Michael-Timmons/dp/0971264651

u/zynix · 2 pointsr/aquaponics

> Recirculating Aquaculture: 3rd Edition

Who did you murder to get that? http://www.amazon.com/Recirculating-Aquaculture-Edition-Michael-Timmons/dp/0971264651

u/ronnoc279 · 1 pointr/Aquaculture

With zero aquaculture knowledge, I'd start studying some texts to give yourself an edge over other potential employees, there is a lot going on a farm, far more than what most people would anticipate.

For Aquaculture Technologies, research: [AKVA] (http://www.akvagroup.com/home) These guys seem to be the leading suppliers of technologies all over the world.

For an Introduction to recirculating aquaculture, research: Timmons' Book This book is basically the aquaculture bible.

It's not very difficult to learn the basic types of filters and systems, just spend a little time reading.

u/pounce · 1 pointr/aquaponics

The yellow book. http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0971264627

Excellent reference for aqauculture, and includes a specific chapter on aquaponics written by Rakocy.

Rakocy and Lennard were supposed to have come out with a book on aquaponics in 2013, so were Timmons and Ebeling. Not a clue on when or if we will ever be seeing those texts. Seems like a lot of public research has stalled regarding aquaponics.

u/MGNute · 1 pointr/AskEngineers

Is there any particular part of biology you are looking to understand? For cell biology, for example, there are probably good ones that start with the mitochondrion as the power supply and explains how proteins are assembled from DNA, and then how extra proteins are digested back into amino acids by the lysosome, etc...

At the macro level there might be something but I haven't found it. Here's how I would write it though. You'd have to start with the idea that all organisms need a ton of carbon to survive, which is why there's so little of it in the atmosphere (CO2 is ~400ppm). Then note that we need relatively little Nitrogen, but the atmosphere has a ton of that (70%), so getting rid of excess Nitrogen is gonna be a key part of the system. Next note that they all need oxygen to burn energy (just like an engine), which comes largely from either what's dissolved in water or in the atmosphere (not what's bonded to hydrogen in the water, that takes a lot of energy to unwind so it's not a good oxidizer.) Finally, they need some hyrdogen but not a ton, that comes mostly from water and gets bonded to Carbons in various ways, mostly to store energy but also to make parts. From there you get a basic living organism: seeking carbon by any means possible, burning oxygen, drinking water and pumping out excess nitrogen. Every organism does each one in different ways. Plants, for example, get their carbon from the small amount in the atmosphere, Animals on the other hand have to eat other organsims to get their carbon. Plants have a weird way of handling nitrogen called the nitrogen cycle, and that I don't fully understand. Fish on the other hand pump it out in the form of amonia right into the water, which would be harmful if there weren't a whole ocean or lake of water around them to absorb it, but Mammals have to hang onto the Nitrogen and store it in a nice water-soluble form (Urea) until they can pump a bunch out at once. But that's I think waht the diagram would look like.

Anyway, I'm a Stats grad student but my research is in DNA sequence analysis, so I've spent a lot of time looking for various explanations like this and have basically had to assemble them in my head as I read wikipedia for the zillionth time. As I look back at what I wrote now I realize that it's probably exactly the kind of oversimplification you were not looking for, but it was worth a shot. Good luck and post any good ones if you find them.

ETA: Actually one thing I just thought of that you might be interested in is some explanation of how indoor recirculating aquaculture systems operate. That's how I learned a good portion of the biology I know, but a system like that is basically a big block diagram with inputs and outputs, and mass balances are the major constraints that have to be built around. This is the book I've always used, mainly because I took Timmons' course in college: http://www.amazon.com/Recirculating-Aquaculture-3rd-Michael-Timmons/dp/0971264651 . Anyway, that's a thought. Good luck.

u/Eurypharynx · -1 pointsr/Aquaculture

Yes, fish can develop issues if they are constantly swimming in one circular direction. You may be able to avoid this with a large enough tank, but most tanks aren't that large. This paper expresses a few issues with round tanks and I have personally witnessed scoliosis caused by swimming long term, in the same direction, in circular tanks.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4270422/

You should check out mixed cell raceways. Also, read Recirculating Aquaculture by M.B. Timmons and J.M. Ebeling. I took a short course from them, in Maine. I aslo have a MS in aquculture/aquatic science. Hope this helps.

https://www.amazon.com/Recirculating-Aquaculture-M-B-Timmons-Ebeling/dp/0971264627