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Liming and Fertilizing
Like
a row-crop field needs fertilizing and liming to increase production,
so does a fishpond. Fertilizing a pond provides nutrients to the base
of the food chain and then has a positive effect all the way up to the
bass. Fertilization can also provide weed control by supporting a large
phytoplankton population that blocks out the sunlight from reaching the
bottom of the lake. An absence of light reaching the bottom, prevents
the establishment of larger, rooted plants. Ponds with existing weed problems
should NOT be fertilized since nutrients increase problematic plant growth.
Fishpond fertilizer comes in two forms, liquid and granular. Both forms
have their advantages and disadvantages. Pond owners can quickly decide
which form works best for their situation. It is not necessary to use
a fishpond fertilizer to fertilize a pond; any agricultural fertilizer
will work as long as the granules don't reach the bottom of the lake.
If the fertilizer reaches the bottom soils, they are absorbed into the
soil and not into the water. Because fishpond fertilizers are much more
water soluble, they are considerably more effective with very little cost
difference.
Ponds
with acidic waters or acidic bottom soils may also need liming. Lime is
a neutralizing agent that buffers pond waters against sudden pH changes
by increasing the alkalinity of the pond water. If a pond is too acidic,
it will bind the phosphorus in the water or bottom soil, and not let it
be used by the phytoplankton. This situation can be so serious as to prevent
fertilization from helping a pond at all.
Ponds
can be tested in two ways to determine if liming is required. The first
method is to collect a sample of the bottom mud and test it like a normal
soil sample. This method works well on new ponds, but once the pond is
full it becomes more difficult. The other method that can be used is to
test the Total alkalinity of the pond water. This method is much easier
when the pond is full. If either test says the pond needs liming, the
pond can be limed by distributing the lime evenly on the bottom of the
pond. This can be done with a spreader truck in newly built, empty ponds,
but in filled ponds it has to be added using a liming barge. The lime
is placed on the barge and then washed off into the pond using a high-pressure
hose. This method is, by far, the most effective method that can be used
to apply lime to an existing pond.
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