For
an Eco-Friendly Home Aquarium, Keep It Small and Track Your Fish
By Nina Shen Rastogi
What's the
greenest way to keep a home aquarium? I love tropical fish, but I
feel bad about running the filters and lights for so many hours.
I've always had a soft spot for aquariums. As a kid, I sat through a
lot of long, boring dinner parties at Chinese restaurants, where the
massive fish tanks were reliable sources of entertainment. But not
all aquariums are created equal when it comes to sustainability.
There are the energy concerns you cite, but where your fish come
from is also a major issue, as is what you do with your pets at the
end of your relationship.
Energy use for aquariums can vary widely, depending on your setup.
According to a 1997 report from the Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, a small freshwater aquarium of, say, 10 gallons might
use as little as 90 to 120 kilowatt-hours a year to run its lights,
filters and aerators. That's about as much as a typical coffeemaker
uses in a year, hardly a major energy suck in the grand scheme of
things.
As you go up in size, your electricity costs will naturally rise. A
55-gallon freshwater tank might use 280 to 400 kilowatt-hours
annually. Adding a lot of plants increases your aquarium's appetite,
because you'll need heavier-duty lighting to keep those plants
alive. And generally speaking, saltwater tanks will use more energy
than freshwater ones because of an increased need for pumps and
powerheads to create water currents; marine aquariums can pull from
230 kilowatt-hours a year for a small tank to nearly 800 for a large
tank.
Those big coral tanks I loved in my younger days at Hong Fu? They
probably drew a whopping amount of energy: A 180-gallon reef tank
requires upward of 6,000 kilowatt-hours a year. (Or at least it did
12 years ago.) With that kind of electricity use, you could power
four or five refrigerators.
Since the Berkeley Lab report came out, there have been a few
advances in aquarium equipment efficiency. You can shave off a few
kilowatt-hours by using LED lights, for example, and there are
newer, energy-saving pumps and ballasts on the market. One equipment
salesperson I spoke with estimated that, overall, the amount of
electricity aquariums use today might be about 25 percent lower than
in 1997.
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Aquarium keeping can also have hidden environmental costs upstream.
In some parts of
Overfishing can be a concern with certain species, such as the
Banggai cardinalfish. Found only in a few pockets off the coast of
Sustainable collection is less of an issue with freshwater aquarium
species, because 90 percent of them are farm-raised. (Saltwater fish
are much harder to breed in captivity: As of six years ago, when the
United Nations' environmental office came out with an extensive
report on the aquarium trade, less than 10 percent of marine
ornamental species were capable of being farm-cultured.) Captive
breeding helps reduce pressure on wild animal populations, but, as
many conservationists argue, maintaining a sustainable trade in
wild-caught organisms -- both freshwater and marine -- can be an
environmentally friendly strategy as well, if it provides economic
incentives for fishermen to keep their local ecosystems healthy.
Before you head to the pet store, then, do some homework to find out
where your fish came from. If you're lucky enough to live near one
of the four Marine Aquarium Council-certified retailers in the
Finally, if you have kids in the house, make sure they don't harbor
any "Finding Nemo" fantasies. Releasing nonnative species into the
wild can cause all kinds of ecological problems, particularly if
those species become established populations. If you find yourself
needing to get rid of a pet fish, try to find it a new home or see
whether a pet store will take it. If you must send your fish to
sleep with its brothers, there are much more humane ways to
euthanize your pet than dumping it in a pond or, God forbid,
flushing it down a toilet.
Better yet, avoid getting yourself into that situation in the first
place: Make sure you buy only fish that won't get too big for your
aquarium and won't start turf wars with their tank mates. As with
anything else you buy, the greenest fish is going to be the one you
don't have to replace.
