Quick Key Facts
- Wetlands exist on every continent except Antarctica.
- Wetlands are home to hydrophytes, literally water plants.
- Freshwater marshes are the most common and widespread wetlands in North America.
- The Sundarbans in India and Bangladesh is a saltwater swamp that boasts the world’s biggest uninterrupted mangrove forest at 140,000 hectares.
- Wetlands provide habitat or breeding grounds for 40% of all plant and animal species.
- Peatlands cover only around 3% of the Earth’s surface but store around 30% of its soil carbon.
- According to one estimate, wetlands are disappearing at three times the rate of forests and are considered the world’s most imperiled ecosystem.
- Nearly half of the tidal wetlands along the U.S. coast are vulnerable to sea-level rise by 2100.
- In Sackett v. EPA, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a wetland only had federal protection if its surface waters touched the waters of a navigable body of water.
- In the Lower 48 U.S. states, 75% of remaining wetlands are on private land.
What Are ‘Wetlands’?
A wetland is exactly what it sounds like: ground that is covered by or saturated with water for all or part of the year. The water that makes a wetland can come from a variety of different sources, including ocean tides; freshwater sources like lakes, rivers, or ponds; underground aquifers, or rain.

Wetlands are found on every continent except Antarctica. Some famous examples are the Everglades in Florida, the Pantanal in Brazil and Monadh Mor in Scotland. There is an amazing diversity of wetlands based on how frequently their soils are saturated, the surrounding climate and the source of the water, among other factors. All wetlands have moistened soils that are described as hydric, and these soils nurture water-loving plants, called hydrophytes. Hydrophyte literally comes from the Greek words for “water” and “plant.” These plants can either spend their lives under the water, floating on top of it or submerged in moist soils and range from mangrove trees to duckweed, but they are all adapted to a watery, low-oxygen environment.

In the past, wetlands were often dismissed as waste areas or sources of mosquitoes and disease. Because of this, human societies have often not treated them with the respect they deserve, either filling them in to build cities, draining them for farmland or using them as garbage dumps. However, wetlands are actually vitally important ecosystems that perform essential functions, from purifying water to storing carbon. As human activities like the burning of fossil fuels push the climate toward a tipping point, wetlands are more important than ever.
What Are the Main Types of Wetlands?
There are many different types of wetlands and means of classifying them. Broadly, wetlands can be divided into coastal or tidal wetlands and inland or non-tidal wetlands. In the U.S., different agencies have different systems for classifying wetlands based on factors like geography, vegetation, water source and how the water flows through the landscape. However, according to National Geographic, there are three basic types of wetlands recognized by scientists: marshes, swamps and bogs. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also includes a fourth type: the fen. Other names for wetlands you may be familiar with include mires, muskegs, sloughs, playa lakes, vernal pools, wet meadows, pocosins, lagoons and deltas.
Marshes

A marsh is a wetland that is frequently or always flooded and where long-stem plants grow in water-saturated soils. They are most common in mid latitudes, and they are divided into tidal or saltwater marshes and non-tidal or freshwater marshes. Tidal or saltwater marshes are often found near estuaries — a biodiverse habitat where a river opens out into the ocean. Typical plants in saltwater marshes include smooth cordgrass close to the tide and short smooth cordgrass, spike grass and saltmeadow rush farther from the shore. Examples are the saltwater marshes of northern Australia — home to the saltwater crocodile — and the salt marshes surrounding Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay.

The Transquaking River feeds into the Fishing Bay salt marsh near Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge in Dorchester County, Maryland, on June 5, 2018. Will Parson / Chesapeake Bay Program
Freshwater or non-tidal marshes are typically found by rivers, streams or lakes, or in depressions where water can gather. Typical vegetation includes bulrushes, reeds, lilly pads and cattails. Freshwater marshes are the most common and widespread types of wetlands in North America. Examples include much of the Everglades and prairie potholes — depressions left in the ground by melting chunks of glacier that created wetlands as they melted. These are important resting stops for migratory birds.
Swamps
A swamp is a wetland characterized by woody plants. Swamps can be divided into either freshwater and saltwater swamps or forested swamps and shrub swamps. All swamps are home to water-tolerant trees or shrubs, but the species depend on the climate and location. There are many freshwater swamps in the tropics, where it is hot and humid all year, but there are swamps as far north as the boreal forests of Russia, Alaska and Canada. Freshwater swamp plants can range from red maples in the northeastern U.S. to cypress in the U.S. south. Swampy shrubs include willows, button bush and smooth alder. One famous example of a freshwater swamp is the Louisiana bayou.

Saltwater swamps are mostly found in the tropics along coastal sand flats or mudflats.The water in saltwater swamps is brackish, meaning it is a mix of salt and freshwater. The trees that typically live in saltwater swamps are called mangroves, which have tall roots that hold their short trunks above water level. Mangroves both attract soil, keep it in place and help create it when they decay. They also provide habitat for marine animals and birds. One example of a saltwater swamp is the Sundarbans in India and Bangladesh, which boasts the world’s biggest uninterrupted mangrove forest at 140,000 hectares. The swamp is home to 260 bird species, the estuarine crocodile, the Indian python and the Bengal tiger.

Bogs
A bog is a type of wetland that is formed when sphagnum moss and other plants accumulate, either trapping the water from a pre-existing lake or pond or collecting and trapping rain water. Most of the current water in a bog comes from rainwater, not groundwater or another source. Because of the water source and the presence of mosses, bog soil and water is acidic and has less nutrients. This means that bogs are not as fertile and only nurture certain types of plants that therefore only attract certain animals. Carnivorous plants like pitcher plants and sundew are some of the unique plants that favor bogs, while cranberries and blueberries are some of the few crops that can be grown in them. One large animal that does spend time in bogs is the moose, who feeds on aquatic plants. Examples of bogs include the cranberry bogs of Massachusetts and the Great Kemeri Bog in Latvia’s Kemeri National Park.

Over time, the plant matter that builds up at the bottom of a bog turns to peat. That means a bog is a type of peatland, or an area where there are 20 to 40 centimeters of peat in the top 80 centimeters of soil. Between 50 and 70% of all wetlands are peatlands. Peat is a fuel in its own right, and can turn into coal with more time and pressure. In addition, bogs are very good at preserving things because of their lack of oxygen and the presence of natural tannins, which are used in preserving leather. Several “bog bodies” — human corpses with hair and clothing — have been found in bogs dating from thousands of years ago, mostly in northern Europe. The most well-preserved “bog body” is Tollund Man, who was found in Denmark’s Bjældskovdal bog in 1950 but lived around 280 B.C.E. He was found wearing a sheepskin hat, an ox-skin belt and skin covering all but his arms and hands.
Fens
Fens are similar to bogs in that they are wetlands that create peat over time. They are also more common in the Northern Hemisphere. However, they are distinct in that they do not rely on rain or snow for their nutrients, instead accessing them via water flowing downhill or through groundwater below. Because of this, they have a broader diversity of plants and animals, including rushes, wildflowers, sedges and grasses.

What Are the Benefits of Wetlands?
Wetlands only cover 6% of the Earth’s land area, but they are vitally important for plant and animal life, nutrient and water cycles and human well-being.
Providing Habitat

Wetlands are very important for biodiversity. About 40% of the Earth’s plants and animals either live or breed in wetlands. In fact, wetlands are on par with coral reefs and tropical rainforests for being some of the world’s most productive ecosystems. This is because they are “biological supermarkets.” Plant matter decays in the water to become detritus, which provides food for insects, small fish and shellfish that then attract larger fish, birds, reptiles, amphibians and mammals. Wetlands play an important role in the life cycles of several species, including salmon, trout, oysters and blue crabs. Some species live only in wetlands, including more than one-third of those on the U.S. endangered and threatened species list. Many birds rely on wetlands for at least part of the year. They are important pit stops for migrating birds, and some migratory species would go extinct without certain wetlands.
Improving Water Quality

Wetlands act as a natural water filtration system, keeping larger bodies of water like rivers and oceans clean. When water enters a wetland, its pace is slowed by the many plants, allowing any sediments within it to become suspended in the wetlands. These sediments, which are often attached to toxic chemicals or nutrient pollution like excess nitrogen or phosphorus from agriculture or wastewater, are then absorbed by plants or settle at the bottom of the wetland. Natural processes can absorb excess nutrients into the wetlands’ nutrient cycle or turn toxic chemicals into less toxic forms. If water passes through a wetland, up to 90% of the sediment within it may be trapped by the wetland, allowing the water to run clear.
Managing Water Flow

Wetlands can also help prevent or reduce the impact of flooding by absorbing excess water and then letting it enter the surrounding landscape or groundwater at a slower pace. Indeed, one acre of wetland can store up to 1.5 million gallons of excess water. The vegetation in wetlands can slow flood waters as well. While this water storage reduces the severity of floods, it also delays the beginning of droughts during drier periods. On the coasts, wetlands can help protect inland areas from storm surges by absorbing both water and wave energy. Mangroves, for example, can act as a natural storm break. Along the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts, where hurricanes are a yearly hazard, wetlands prevent almost $700,000 in storm damage per square mile each year on average.
Sequestering Carbon

Another thing that scientists are learning about wetlands in the context of the climate crisis is that they are natural sinks for carbon dioxide, drawing down around 8.1 million tons of carbon dioxide from the air annually. “All ecosystems store carbon, but wetlands store a lot more than all the rest,” said Michigan Tech School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science professor Rod Chimner. Coastal wetlands may sequester carbon as much as 55 times faster than tropical rainforests. Peatlands are also important carbon sinks — while they only take up around 3% of the Earth’s land area, they store around 30% of its soil carbon.
Supporting Local Economies

Because they are such productive ecosystems, wetlands can also provide many economic benefits to humans if managed sustainably. In fact, more than one billion people derive their livelihoods from wetlands. For example, many fisheries depend on wetlands to keep their population numbers high, including more than half of the U.S. commercial seafood harvest. Several crops are cultivated in wetlands, such as cranberries, blueberries and wild rice. In addition, wetlands provide opportunities for ecotourism through kayaking, birdwatching and other water-based activities.
Cultural Benefits
While some human societies have dismissed or disparaged wetlands, others have developed close cultural ties with them. The Cajun culture in Louisiana, for example, is intimately tied to life on the bayou. Wetlands have inspired cultural traditions and mythology from all over the world, from crane festivals in Japan to the legend of the kelpie, the Celtic water horse that is sometimes drawn with a mane of bulrushes. Many Indigenous peoples around the world have developed their cultures based on wetlands, and these ecosystems remain important for their spirituality and livelihoods.

What Are the Main Threats Facing Wetlands?
Despite their irreplaceable value, wetlands have historically been undervalued by settler or industrial societies, to devastating consequences. In the U.S., more than half of all of the wetlands in the lower 48 states were drained between the 1600s and today. Globally, the Ramsan Convention on Wetlands calculated that 35% of all wetlands have been lost since 1970, and that they are now disappearing at three times the rate of forests, making them the world’s most imperiled type of ecosystem. A 2023 study published in Nature put the extent of global loss at a lower but still significant 21% between 1700 and 2020, with the U.S. taking the lead for greatest wetland loss of any country. While the rate of wetland loss has declined in the U.S. since the 1970s, it still loses around 60,000 acres a year.

Agriculture
Land-use change is the greatest threat to wetlands both historically and currently, with conversion of wild lands to agricultural lands being the leading cause of wetland loss. Agriculture has degraded more than half of the Wetlands of International Importance. In some cases, wetlands will be drained to be converted to cropland. This can be counterproductive, as wetlands can actually support agriculture if left alone by providing soil nutrients, water for grazing animals and drought prevention, among other benefits. However, livestock grazing can harm wetlands when not properly managed, as the animals may devour plants that help prevent erosion of streambanks and sedimentation of the water.

Development
Wetlands have also been drained and filled to be turned into human developments. Major cities including London, Venice, New Orleans and New York were all built on wetlands. In the U.S., pressure from development is overtaking agriculture as the leading cause of wetland loss. Converting wetlands into urban areas can worsen flooding because the water-absorbing vegetation is replaced with impervious materials like concrete.

Dams
The damming of rivers for agriculture or energy can harm wetlands by diverting water away from them. By altering the flow of rivers, these dams can reduce seasonal flooding, causing certain wetlands to shrink and harming the species that depend on them for habitat. One example is the Colorado River Delta, which was once the largest wetland in North America but dwindled over the 20th century as almost 90% of the Colorado River was diverted for households, farms and energy in the U.S. before even reaching Mexico. While the delta has largely dried up, there are now efforts in place to restore it.

Pollution
While wetlands are adept at filtering pollutants, sometimes the amount of contaminants that human activities dump into the environment can become too much for them. In addition, as wetlands disappear, this puts more pressure on the remaining wetlands to filter more toxins. Major pollutants that harm wetlands include sediment, fertilizer, human and animal waste, pesticides and heavy metals. These pollutants can then harm the plants and animals in the wetlands. For example, fertilizer pollution can encourage too many plants to grow, which then deprive the remaining wetland plants and animals of oxygen as they die and decay. The rise in plastic pollution is also impacting wetlands, killing birds and turtles. Another recent study found that tire particles are harming organisms in estuaries.

Climate Crisis
The climate crisis threatens coastal wetlands through sea-level rise and coastal erosion, while it exposes others to drought and desertification. For example, 43 to 48% of the tidal wetlands along the U.S. coast are vulnerable to sea-level rise by 2100. Globally, 20 to 90% of coastal wetlands may be swallowed by higher ocean levels. Wetlands in the Arctic and in mountain ecosystems are also especially at risk from climate change as rapid ice melt alters these environments.

What Is Sackett v. EPA and How Does It Impact Wetlands?
One recent impediment to the protection of wetlands in the U.S. is the Supreme Court decision Sackett v. EPA. This decision, ruled in 2023, involved what counts as part of the “waters of the United States” that the federal government is authorized to protect under the Clean Water Act of 1972. For most of the act’s history, waters of the United States, or WOTUS, have been interpreted to mean any body of water in a given watershed. In Sackett v. EPA, however, the court ruled that only navigable waters, streams leading directly to navigable waters or wetlands directly connected via surface water to navigable waters merit federal protections. This puts many wetlands that may be connected to a larger river via groundwater, vegetation or downhill flow at risk from development.
How Can We Protect Wetlands?
Despite the many threats to wetlands, there is growing awareness of their ecological importance as well as a growing movement to both save existing wetlands and restore degraded ones.
Preservation
There are many ways to preserve wetlands on the global, national, local and individual level. The Convention on Wetlands is an international treaty aimed at the conservation and “wise use” of wetlands. It was adopted in Ramsar, Iran, in 1971, and today nearly 90% of UN member states are “contracting parties.” The internationally recognized goal of protecting 30% of lands and waters by 2030 can also be an opportunity to protect wetland ecosystems. One recent example is the protection in 2022 of Argentina’s Mitre Peninsula, which included one of South America’s largest peatlands.
In the Lower 48 U.S, nearly 75% of wetlands are on private land, so it is vital that people with wetlands on their property act as stewards. Individuals who care about wetlands can lobby for national, state, or local laws that protect wetlands; volunteer or donate money to organizations that preserve wetlands; oppose developments that would harm or fill wetlands; and reduce the runoff of pollution into wetlands by installing rain barrels and permeable surfaces in their yards and avoiding pesticides and nutrient-rich fertilizers.

USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, in partnership with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, worked with private landowners on the habitat for the Oregon chub on a Wetlands Reserve Program site known as the Dunn Pond. The program allows landowners to voluntarily restore and protect wetlands. NRCS Oregon / Flickr
Restoration
It is also possible to restore wetlands that have been damaged or degraded. This can happen through both re-establishing the wetland environment and rehabilitating the function of the ecosystem. In the U.S., wetland restoration is sometimes required by law to offset the permitted destruction of or damage to a wetland for a particular project.
There are many examples of wetland restoration projects. One example is the concept of “sponge cities” in China. Urban planners are replacing concrete flood walls or river banks with plants and parks to help prevent floods and restore urban wetlands. Another example is the effort to bring water flow back to the Colorado River Delta. A 2018 study of these efforts found that restored areas attracted 74% more birds and 20% more bird species than areas that were not.

Takeaway

Wetlands are unique and valuable ecosystems that provide tremendous benefits for both non-human and human life — if humans can learn to appreciate them. In the past few centuries of industrial development, human societies have often worked against wetlands, seeing them as obstacles to growing food or building settlements. This attitude has harmed both wetlands and humans, leading, for example, to dwindling fisheries and cities that flood more regularly and intensely.
But if human societies can learn to once again work with wetlands, these amazing marshes, swamps, bogs and fens can help to protect against storms, reduce flooding, restore biodiversity, fight the climate crisis and make the world a little more extraordinary.

The post Wetlands 101: Everything You Need to Know appeared first on EcoWatch.
https://www.ecowatch.com/wetlands-facts-ecowatch.html
Green Living
56 Environmental Innovations in the 56 Years Since Earth Day Began
The first Earth Day was celebrated on April 22, 1970 — 56 years ago — and, goodness, how the world has changed since then. We’ve come a long way since the days of burning our trash and pumping our gas guzzlers with leaded gasoline. In honor of those 56 years, here are 56 important changes and milestones since the first Earth Day.
Legislation
The U.S. government has led much of the environmental charge, starting with the implementation of the EPA (1) in July 1970. Later that year, the Clean Air Act (2) targeted air pollutants, followed by the Clean Water Act (3) in 1972 and the Endangered Species Act (4) in 1973.
Some lesser-known national laws included the Safe Water Drinking Act (5) in 1974, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (6) in 1976, the Toxic Substances Control Act (7) in 1976, the National Energy Act (8) in 1978, and the Medical Waste Tracking Act (9) in 1988.
In some cases, states have led the charge. Oregon passed the first bottle bill (10) in 1971, Minnesota’s Clean Indoor Air Act (11) was the first law to restrict smoking in public places (1975), and Massachusetts required low-flush toilets (12) for construction and remodeling in 1988.
Green Innovations: The Early Years
In order to comply with all the laws from the 1970s, we needed new technology to ensure consumers could adhere to the new standards. Consider:
- The “Crying Indian” PSA debuts in 1971 (13)
- Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) gets banned in 1972 (14)
- The energy-efficient compact fluorescent light bulb launches in 1973 (15)
- Cars begin displaying fuel economy labels in the mid-1970s (16)
- In 1975, all cars are manufactured with catalytic converters to limit exhaust emissions (17)
- Chlorofluorocarbons are banned from aerosol cans starting in 1978 (18)
- The first curbside recycling program begins in New Jersey in 1980 (19)
- In 1986, McDonald’s switches from foam to paper food containers (20)
- Mercury is removed from latex paint in 1990, providing a viable alternative to banned lead paint (21)
- Earth911 launches the first U.S. recycling directory in 1991 (22)
- Energy Star certification debuts in 1992 for appliances and electronics (23)
- The U.S. Green Building Council begins in 1993 (24)
The Political Movement
The Green Party (25) launched in 1984, which was just the beginning of green issues entering the mainstream. One Percent for the Planet (26) was founded in 2002 to challenge businesses to donate to environmental causes, and the ISO 14001 standard (27) established environmental management. Companies are now facing pressure to allow employee telecommuting (28).
Things really developed after the release of Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth (29) in 2006. NBC debuted Green Week (30) in 2007. Carbon offsets (31) alleviated corporate green guilt. Bisphenol A (32) made us all question plastic purchases. Hybrid vehicles (33) generated tax credits and gas savings. Plastic bag bans gave rise to a reusable bag (34) craze. Fracking (35) and the Dakota Access Pipeline (36) were two of the most hotly contested news stories of the decade, at least until the 2016 election.
Green Tech: The Next Wave

In the past 10 years, emerging green tech has made eco-friendly a way of life, including:
- LED light bulbs (37)
- Portable solar panels on backpacks and watches (38)
- Plant-based plastics (39)
- Motion sensor lighting (40)
- Faucets with automatic shut-off (41)
- Low volatile organic compound (VOC) paint (42)
- Recycled plastic clothing (43)
- Ride-sharing mobile applications (44)
- Natural cleaning products (45)
- Biodiesel engine vehicles (46)
- Food waste composting (47)
- Portable air purifiers (48)
- Europe’s Green Deal introduced global recyclables shipping regulations to reduce pollution in low-income nations (49)
- Corporate borrowers headed toward $500 billion in bond financings for the renewables transition (50)
- President Biden rejoins the Paris Climate Accord on his first day in office. (51)
The Latest Five: 2022–2026
The pace of innovation has not slowed. Five more milestones have reshaped the environmental landscape since that 51st Earth Day:
- The Inflation Reduction Act (52), signed into law in August 2022, became the largest climate investment in U.S. history, directing roughly $370 billion toward clean energy tax credits, EV incentives, methane reduction, and domestic clean manufacturing. Analysts projected it will drive more than $4 trillion in cumulative capital investment over a decade and put the U.S. on track for a 40% emissions reduction by 2030. Sadly, many of its key provisions have been defunded or eliminated by the Trump Administration.
- The Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (53), adopted by 188 governments in December 2022, set the most ambitious biodiversity protection commitment in history. Its headline “30×30” target calls for conserving 30% of the planet’s land, freshwater, and ocean areas by 2030, a goal that would require doubling current protected land coverage and quadrupling marine protections.
- America’s first commercial direct air capture plant (54), opened by Heirloom Carbon Technologies in Tracy, California in November 2023, marked the arrival of atmospheric carbon removal at commercial scale on U.S. soil. The plant uses limestone to absorb CO₂ directly from the air, with the captured carbon injected into concrete for permanent storage. In May 2024, Climeworks activated the world’s largest direct air capture facility, the Mammoth plant in Iceland, with a design capacity to remove 36,000 tons of CO₂ per year.
- Solid-state batteries (55), a next-generation alternative to conventional lithium-ion technology, moved from laboratory promise toward commercial reality between 2022 and 2026. Unlike liquid-electrolyte batteries, solid-state versions are less flammable, achieve higher energy density, and degrade more slowly. In early 2025, Mercedes-Benz began road-testing a prototype EV powered by a lithium-metal solid-state cell that extended driving range 25% over comparable liquid-battery models. Multiple automakers and cell manufacturers now target commercial production between 2027 and 2030.
- Perovskite and tandem solar cells (56), a new photovoltaic technology that pairs conventional silicon with thin perovskite layers, pushed solar efficiency into territory once considered theoretical. By 2024, tandem cells in laboratory settings exceeded 34% efficiency — well above the roughly 22% ceiling of standard silicon panels only a few years ago. manufacturers in Asia and Europe began scaling pilot production lines. Because perovskite cells can be printed on flexible substrates, they open the door to solar surfaces on buildings, vehicles, and everyday objects that conventional panels cannot reach.
The past 56 years have been huge when it comes to saving the environment. Expect more to come, including a resurgent EV industry, nuclear fusion, regenerative agriculture, restorative forestry, and more, as costs and the cool factor improve.
Editor’s Note: Originally published on April 18, 2018, this article was most recently updated in April 2026.
The post 56 Environmental Innovations in the 56 Years Since Earth Day Began appeared first on Earth911.
https://earth911.com/eco-tech/eco-friendly-innovations/
Green Living
Earth911 Inspiration: Forests Are the Lungs of Our Land
This week’s quotation is from Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd president of the United States: “A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself. Forests are the lungs of our land, purifying the air and giving fresh strength to our people.”
Earth911 inspiration posters: Post them and share your desire to help people think of the planet first, every day. Click the poster to get a larger image.
The post Earth911 Inspiration: Forests Are the Lungs of Our Land appeared first on Earth911.
https://earth911.com/inspire/earth911-inspiration-forests-are-lungs-of-land/
Green Living
How To Grow Vegetables With Aquaponics
One gallon of water. That’s roughly how much a well-run aquaponics system uses to grow a kilogram of leafy greens. Compare that to the 30 or more gallons required by conventional soil farming, according to a 2024 comparative greenhouse study, and the benefits are inescapable.
That efficiency is why aquaponics — raising fish and growing plants in a closed-loop system — has moved from backyard novelty to subject of serious agricultural research. A 2025 review in Sustainable Environment Research documents how integrating AI, IoT sensors, and automation into aquaponics can significantly enhance system efficiency, increase food production, reduce operational costs, and minimize waste. For home gardeners in 2026, the barrier to entry has never been lower. All-in-one kits start under $100, water quality testing has become more accurate and affordable, and the science behind getting both fish and plants to thrive is well-established.
Nitrification is at the heart of every aquaponics system. Fish produce ammonia-rich waste. Beneficial bacteria convert that ammonia first into nitrite, then into nitrate — a form plants can absorb directly. The plants filter the water. The cleaned water returns to the fish. Once the system cycles, the main inputs are fish food and occasional water top-offs.
This article contains affiliate links. If you purchase an item through one of these links, we receive a small commission that helps fund our Recycling Directory.
1. Invest in Reliable Equipment
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The core hardware list hasn’t changed much — but what’s available at each price point has improved considerably.
Aquarium or tank. A 100-gallon tank remains the recommended starting point for a serious home system. It gives you flexibility in fish species, plant density, and system stability. Acrylic tanks are lighter and optically clearer; glass tanks are heavier but scratch-resistant. Expect to pay $300–$600 for a quality 100-gallon tank. Search current options on Amazon.
If you’re new to aquaponics, the AquaSprouts Garden Kit is a well-reviewed all-in-one beginner system that fits a standard 10-gallon aquarium. It includes a grow bed, submersible pump, mechanical timer, and light bar mounting system, and costs $75–$90. The aquarium itself is sold separately.
Canister filter. For a 100-gallon aquaponics tank, target 500–600 gallons per hour (GPH) of water turnover, well above what the tank volume alone would suggest, because the fish load demands high filtration. The Fluval FX2 (~$269 on Amazon) is consistently top-rated for tanks up to 100 gallons, featuring 4-stage filtration, Smart Pump technology that auto-adjusts flow, and a built-in water change system. A solid budget alternative is the Penn-Plax Cascade 1000 (~$199 on Amazon), which handles up to 100 gallons, recirculating the water more than twice an hour.
Air pump. Dissolved oxygen is critical for fish health and for the beneficial bacteria driving nitrification. A quality air pump — or a canister filter with an integrated spray bar — will keep oxygen levels stable. A 2025 review in Reviews in Aquaculture found that micro-nano bubble (MNB) aeration increased butterhead lettuce yield by 35% compared to conventional diffusers, and raised nitrate concentration in the water. MNB systems are commercially available but not yet mainstream for home setups, so a conventional air pump remains the practical choice for most beginners.
Grow lights (optional, system-dependent). Indoor systems need supplemental lighting. Full-spectrum LED grow lights have dropped substantially in price and energy draw. Look for LED bars with daylight-spectrum output (5000–6500K) sized to your grow bed. Search LED grow lights on Amazon.
Water heater (optional). Tilapia require 70–85°F. If your space runs cooler, a submersible aquarium heater is essential. Search aquarium heaters on Amazon.
2. Choose Your Setup
Three system types work at home scale. The choice depends on available space, target crops, and tolerance for complexity.
Media bed are recommended for beginners. Plants grow in a bed of inert media, such as expanded clay pebbles, gravel, or lava rock, positioned above or beside the fish tank. A pump floods the bed periodically, then drains back. The media supports roots and houses beneficial bacteria. Research from Texas A&M confirmed media beds are the most forgiving system for beginners and support the widest range of crops, including fruiting vegetables like tomatoes and cucumbers. The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service provides detailed DIY build plans.
A 2025 study found that carbonized rice husks and cocopeat as grow media can yield five times more crop than traditional expanded clay aggregate (LECA), though they decompose over time and require more frequent replacement.
Nutrient film technique (NFT). A thin stream of water flows continuously through PVC tubes past plant roots dangling inside. Excellent for herbs, lettuce, and small greens in tight or vertical spaces; the tubes can be wall-mounted. Vertical aquaponics setups can increase productivity per unit area by up to 160% compared to horizontal systems, based on research with strawberries and basil. NFT kits are available on Amazon for both DIY and complete systems.
Raft (deep water culture). Plants float on foam rafts with roots submerged directly in nutrient-rich water drawn from the fish tank. They produce a higher yield than NFT for leafy greens, but requires more robust filtration because solids aren’t removed by a media bed. More common in semi-commercial operations than small home setups. Check options on Amazon.
A growing range of IoT sensors let you track pH, dissolved oxygen, ammonia, and temperature continuously from your phone. WiFi pH/EC meters designed for hydroponic and aquaponic systems are now in the $60–$120 range. For beginners, manual weekly testing is fine. For anyone running a system unattended or scaling up, continuous monitoring significantly reduces the risk of a water quality crash.

3. Add the Fish
An aquaponics system will support many species of fish. Several of the most popular options are:
- Tilapia: The most common aquaponics fish for good reason. Tilapia tolerate temperature swings, pH variation, and elevated ammonia better than most species. They grow quickly (typical harvest: 6–8 months), are inexpensive to stock, and provide a dual harvest of vegetables and protein. Best for warm indoor or greenhouse systems (70–85°F).
- Koi: Popular ornamental choice. Koi tolerate poor water quality and are hardy once established, but they’re susceptible to a range of pathogens and aren’t typically harvested for food. Well-suited to media bed systems where water quality is easier to maintain.
- Bluegill, perch, and catfish. Solid edible alternatives to tilapia in cooler climates where tilapia’s warmth requirements are a challenge. Texas A&M’s fish species selection guide covers temperature ranges, feed conversion ratios, and disease susceptibility for home-scale species in detail.
These are great options, but you can also consider carp, perch, largemouth bass, bluegills, guppies, and more. Purchase fish from a reputable aquaculture supplier or local fish hatchery when possible — disease-carrying fish is one of the fastest ways to crash a new system. Pet store fish are not certified disease-free.
4. Add the Plants
Like fish, the options are endless when deciding which vegetables to grow in your aquaponics system. Some popular options include broccoli, celery, cucumbers, and basil.
But because different plants require different conditions, you’ll want to select plants that will thrive in your setup. As Go Green Aquaponics explains, it is important to consider the following:
- System: What type of aquaponics system you will use – plants with no root structure do well in a raft setup, while root vegetables do well in a media bed.
- The optimal temperature and pH level for your fish and your plants – the closer the match, the more successful you’ll be.
- Environment: the amount of light, temperature and – if you’re setting up your system outside – rain the plants will get.
- How much space you have for plants versus how much space the plants need to grow.
- Plant-to-fish ratio: The more fish you plan on having, the more plants you need to absorb the nutrients.
5. Maintain Your System
Keeping healthy plants and fish will require regular maintenance. Some tips include:
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Feed your fish two to three times daily in small amounts. Overfeeding is the most common cause of ammonia spikes in home systems. Uneaten food decomposes rapidly and overwhelms the beneficial bacteria that keep the system in balance.
Test pH weekly. Target range is 6.4–7.4, with most systems running best around 6.8–7.0. The API Freshwater Master Test Kit (~$35 on Amazon) tests pH, ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate in one kit — the standard recommendation for aquaponics monitoring. For more serious systems, the LaMotte Aquaponics Water Test Kit (~$85 on Amazon) covers nine parameters including dissolved oxygen and carbon dioxide, and comes with a rugged carrying case. To raise pH naturally, dissolve a tablespoon of food-grade potassium carbonate (potash) in a bucket of system water, add it slowly to the tank, and retest after 24 hours before adding more.
Test ammonia and nitrate weekly or biweekly. Ammonia should be below 2 ppm; nitrates should stay under 160 ppm. Elevated ammonia: feed less, increase aeration, or reduce fish density. High nitrates: add more plants or remove some fish.
Mind the cycling period. A new system takes 4–6 weeks to fully cycle and for the bacterial colony to establish and nitrogen conversion to stabilize. Don’t increase fish load or plant density during this period. Ammonia and nitrite readings near zero consistently is your green light.
The following video from Rob Bob’s Aquaponics provides guidance on how to check the pH, ammonia levels, and nitrate levels.
Get Some Fish In Your Garden
Aquaponics is an easy and environmentally conscious way to grow produce and raise fish at the same time. It can be used to grow all your favorite leafy greens, and there are endless varieties of fish that will adapt well to this system. Just keep up with regular maintenance and aquaponics will prove to be a viable and sustainable new way to garden.
The science of aquaponics is advancing quickly. Three developments from recent peer-reviewed literature are worth knowing about, even if most aren’t yet practical for home systems:
Algae co-cultivation. Reviews in Aquaculture reports that introducing macroalgae such as Spirogyra spp. can nearly double plant yields compared to traditional aquaponic systems. Co-cultivating microalgae (Chlorella) with plants in raft systems also controls ammonia at twice the efficacy of non-algal systems. This is emerging research — not yet mainstream for home growers — but a promising direction for anyone looking to push yields further.
Decoupled system design. Research from the Journal of the World Aquaculture Society (2024) documents that decoupled systems, which separate the aquaculture unit from the hydroponic unit, allow optimized conditions in each component, resulting in better nutrient utilization and increased productivity compared to coupled designs. Decoupled systems allow independent pH management for fish and plants, which is otherwise a constant compromise in standard coupled setups. Commercially available decoupled systems are beginning to become available; for DIY builders, it’s a worthwhile design consideration when scaling up.
AI and IoT integration. A 2025 Sustainable Environment Research review emphasizes that monitoring strategies using artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things, and renewable energy can significantly enhance aquaponic system efficiency. For home growers, this means the WiFi monitoring systems mentioned in Step 2 are part of a broader wave of automation coming to small-scale aquaponics. The good news: prices will continue to drop.
Editor’s Note: This article was originally published on March 17, 2021, and updated in April 2026. Feature image of outdoor aquaponics system courtesy of Vasch~nlwiki, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
About the Author
David Thomas is founder and editor-in-chief of Everything Fishkeeping, a fishkeeping and aquascaping magazine. He has been keeping fish since he was a child and has kept over 12 different setups. His favorite is his freshwater tank with Tetras and Loaches.
The post How To Grow Vegetables With Aquaponics appeared first on Earth911.
https://earth911.com/home-garden/grow-vegetables-with-aquaponics/
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