Garden Pond Aerators
Includes everything you
need to enhance the quality of your pond water during the cold
winter months as well as in the hot summer months.
- Comes with a
small air compressor generating 7 ½ cuft/hr and uses 5 watts per
for the PondAir 2, and 19 cuft/hr and uses 12 watts
of power for the PondAir 4
- Mount the
aerator compressor in a dry location and feed the air lines into
your pond. (see suggestion below)
- Plugs into
any 110 VAC standard wall outlet
- Replaceable
Airstone(s) available from TJB-INC
- During the
warmer months, the air stones should be in the deepest part of the
pond to add oxygen to the stagnet areas. This additional oxgyen
will help breakdown fish waste and other decaying organic matter
much quicker. Your pond and it's inhabitants will be much better
for it.
- During the
cold winter months, raise the air stones to a shelf that is around
12 inches from the surface. This will keep the warmer water down in
the bottom of the pond so your fish won't freeze, but yet keep a
hole open in the ice so the harmful gases form the deacying organic
matter can vent to the atmosphere.
- Replacement
Diaphram(s) are available from TJB-INC. The PondAir 2
uese 1 diaphram and the PondAir 4 use 2 diaphrams.
Available in 2 Sizes:
-
PondAir 2
: (2) ¼" nipples, (2) 30' x ¼" Air Lines, (2) Replaceable
air-stones. This Pond Aerator is good for pond up to 500
gallons.
-
PondAir 4
: (4) ¼" nipples, (4) 30' x ¼" Air Lines, (4) Replaceable
air-stones. This Pond Aerator is good for pond up to 1600
gallons. SOLD OUT
SUGGESTION FROM SHOPTJB
To make the aerator last longer, protect
the aerator unit from the elements. We place the aerator on a
brick to raise it off the ground. Then we cover the unit with
a plastic or clay pot to keep it dry. Becareful not to pinch
the air lines. This protects the aerator from the weather and
allows the unit to be placed closer to the pond
A proper pond aerator is vital to having a
healthy koi pond, water garden or lake no matter what time of
year it is. Use a pond air pump during hot weather to
provide the necessary oxygen. During the winter an air pump
will keep an opening in the ice, add oxygen and help gas off
toxins.
Any system
will benefit from adding an aerator. An air pump will
also help the growth rate of your fish, both koi and
goldfish. Adding an aerator will also help the biological
process within your pond. Biological filtration
requires large amounts of oxygen so pond air pumps
should be used.
A fish pond
can never have too much oxygen! Never has a truer statement been
made. It is needed by aquatic life, pond plants and by the
beneficial bacteria responsible for removing poisonous ammonia from
your pond water.
A sure sign that your pond could do with more oxygenated water is
when your Koi and other fish can be seen gulping for air at the
pond surface. This is more likely to happen in warm weather
conditions as warm water cannot hold as much oxygen as colder
water.
Atmospheric air contains approximately 21% oxygen. This oxygen is
absorbed into the pond where it is used up rapidly. In hot weather
conditions, as mentioned earlier the oxygen is not absorbed as
easily.
For this reason it is always a good idea to incorporate
a waterfall or fountain into your pond, as this causes
turbulence at the water surface. This turbulence makes it easier
for oxygen to be absorbed into the water.
In a previous article I discussed the importance of removing
ammonia from your pond as soon as it appears by installing an
adequately sized biological pond filter. It isn't actually the
biofilter itself that removes the ammonia and nitrite, but rather
the nitrifying bacteria (Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter) that live on
the pond filter media housed in the biofilter
chamber.
It is fair to say that without these friendly bacteria it would be
extremely difficult to prevent your fish succumbing to ammonia
poisoning.
You are probably wondering what these bacteria have got to do with
an article relating to the importance of oxygen to a biofilter. Let
me explain ...
Unlike large lakes and ponds found in nature that have a small
population of inhabitants compared with the volume of water the
average garden fish pond has a large population of aquatic life in
only a small volume of water. Due to this small volume of water the
levels of ammonia are proportionately very high. If the ammonia
wasn't removed by a biofilter then you would start to see dead
fish.
Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter bacteria convert ammonia into nitrite
and then into nitrate (plant food). The chemical process involved
in this conversion process is known as the Nitrogen Cycle and
requires vast amounts of oxygen, in order to be carried out
effectively.
The process requires a constant supply of oxygenated water. This is
why it is important to never switch off the pump supplying water to
the biofilter. If you were to switch off the pump the colonies will
start to die off after only 5 to 6 hours. The net result is a rapid
increase in ammonia levels, particularly if you continue to feed
and encourage metabolic fish waste.
Oxygen in
ponds comes from two sources--photosynthesis and diffusion from the
air. The most important source, photosynthesis, is the process
plants use for manufacturing food. In the presence of sunlight,
plants (especially algae) add oxygen to water as a by-product of
photosynthesis. At night, no oxygen is produced, but respiration of
algae, fish and bacteria continues to remove oxygen from the water.
Most of the time there is a desirable balance between how much
oxygen is produced and how much is used, but under some conditions,
the balance can be upset, and the oxygen concentration becomes low
enough to stress or kill fish. The amount of oxygen in pond water
can vary considerably from pond to pond and from hour to hour.
Typically, however, oxygen concentrations are lowest at dawn and
highest during late afternoon.
The amount of oxygen water can hold is dependent upon atmospheric
pressure, salinity and temperature. Water can hold less oxygen as
altitude increases. Salinity is not important for most freshwater
fish producers. The most important factor is water temperature. As
temperature increases, water can hold less oxygen. Most low oxygen
problems occur from June through September. The reasons for this
are:
- Water can
hold less oxygen as it becomes warmer.
- Respiration
rates of both plants and fish increase with the warmer water, so
more oxygen is used.
- Summer's
still, hazy or cloudy days may reduce the amount of oxygen
produced.
- Large amounts
of feed given to fish at this time of year result in large
quantities of fish waste which create a higher demand for
oxygen.
Winter
Fish Kills, They Don’t Float With Us!
You’ve waited all Winter long for the ice to melt over your water
garden so you can run your waterfalls and enjoy your finned
friends. Instead, you find your fish floating at the ponds surface,
victims of a winter fish kill. What is this phenomenon and how can
you prevent it?
Make Some
Holes
When a layer of ice forms over the surface of you water garden, it
essentially eliminates any transfer of air to or from your pond’s
water. What this means to you is that, as debris decompose and your
fish consume oxygen, byproducts are produced in the form of gasses
that are toxic to your pond’s inhabitants. These gases are trapped
under the ice and cannot escape; fresh air from outside the pond
cannot reach the water either and so begins the process of the
winter fish kill. Keeping a hole in the ice will allow the bad air
in the pond to be replenished with good air. Some pond guys and
gals use pond De-Icers to maintain an open hole, but many more
rely on their aeration systems to do the job.
Pass The
Bubbly
We’ve discussed in our past blogs the many benefits of aeration in
your water garden. It circulates the water in your pond, infusing
it with oxygen which is beneficial to your bacteria and fish. The
constant bubbling produced by an aeration system will also keep a
hole open in your water garden in the winter months, ensuring the
release of those harmful gasses.
CUSTOMER REVIEWS
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Fantastic Service
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Fast Delivery and great pump so far!
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CUSTOMER QUESTIONS
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1/4/2012
--
I don't have a pond, I have a 100 gallon water tank for my horse, and I'd like to see if I can keep the surface ice . . .
7/13/2011
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I am trying to hook this aerator up to a small pv panel... what is the wattage rating for the 2 stone pump and do I need . . .
4/19/2011
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I do not have a pond. My application is aeration in a 7,000 gallon well tank here in the California desert. We have a sulphur . . .
10/30/2010
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My pond is 9 x 15' avg of 3' deep (max is 4')My guess is 2500 to 3000 gallons. Central Wisconsin has cold winters. . . .
5/3/2010
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pond size 10'x20'x24"
aprox 3,000,00 gal
what do you sell for this size pond
trying to clear green water . . .
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