Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Fish Sometimes Need Extra Air

Actually, they need oxygen. Fish die in ice-covered ponds that do not have water flowing into them when they deplete the available oxygen.  Plants under water can make oxygen when sunlight shines through clear ice but deep snow makes it dark. A few years ago we lost our large fish when we neglected to aerate our pond soon enough. After the ice thawed, we gathered them up and planted them in the garden but would have preferred to have them alive.

Many ponds in our neighborhood have this problem and support only small fish, reptiles and amphibians. A few fish in a deep pond or any number of fish in a
pond with a babbling stream running into it can live under ice until it melts. We feed the fish in our acre and a half pond so there are quite a few larger ones that seem to need more oxygen than minnows and young ones. We use a small air compressor that creates a stream of tiny bubbles (through air stones) that pump warmer water from ten feet down up to melt a large hole in the ice, see photo below.


Some winters here in upstate New York have had well spaced thaws that periodically aerated the water so that we didn’t have to bubble the pond but the last few winters have been quite cold for long periods that required attention to keep our animals under the ice healthy.
Compressor and Air Stones Creating Open Water in 5 Inches of Ice Covering a Pond 

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