Ammonia control is one of the most important parts of RAS fish farming. In a Recirculating Aquaculture System, fish waste, uneaten feed, and organic matter continuously release ammonia into the water. If ammonia is not removed properly, it can stress fish, reduce growth, damage gills, and even cause fish mortality.
The key to ammonia removal in RAS is not one single device. It requires a complete water treatment process, including mechanical filtration, biological filtration, oxygenation, feeding control, water quality monitoring, and good daily management.
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Ammonia mainly comes from fish metabolism and organic waste decomposition. When fish digest feed, they release ammonia through their gills and waste. Uneaten feed and feces also break down in the water and increase ammonia levels.
Common ammonia sources include:
In high-density RAS farming, ammonia can accumulate quickly if the filtration system is not properly designed.
Ammonia exists in two main forms in water:
Un-ionized ammonia, or NH₃, is more toxic to fish. Its toxicity increases when water temperature and pH rise. This means the same total ammonia level can become more dangerous in warm or high-pH water.
High ammonia levels may cause:
That is why ammonia should be monitored together with pH, temperature, dissolved oxygen, and nitrite.
The most important method for ammonia removal in RAS is biological filtration.
A biofilter provides a surface for beneficial nitrifying bacteria to grow. These bacteria convert ammonia into nitrite and then nitrite into nitrate through the nitrification process.
The basic process is:
Ammonia → Nitrite → Nitrate
Common biofilter types include:
A good biofilter must have enough bio media surface area, proper water flow, stable oxygen, and suitable pH. If the biofilter is too small, ammonia and nitrite may rise quickly.
Bio media is the carrier for nitrifying bacteria. The larger the effective surface area, the more space bacteria have to grow.
When choosing bio media, consider:
For commercial RAS systems, bio media capacity should be calculated according to fish biomass, feeding amount, and ammonia production, not only tank volume.
Mechanical filtration is also important for ammonia control. If fish waste and uneaten feed stay in the system too long, they decompose and release more ammonia.
Common mechanical filtration equipment includes:
A drum filter or microfilter can remove suspended solids quickly before they enter the biofilter. This reduces organic load and helps the biofilter work more efficiently.
A recommended RAS treatment process is:
Fish Tank → Drum Filter → Biofilter → UV Sterilizer → Oxygenation → Fish Tank
Nitrifying bacteria need oxygen to convert ammonia and nitrite. If dissolved oxygen is too low, biofilter efficiency will decrease and ammonia may rise.
Oxygen is important for:
RAS oxygen equipment may include:
For high-density RAS farms, backup oxygen equipment is strongly recommended.
Overfeeding is one of the most common causes of ammonia problems. More feed means more fish waste, more organic matter, and more ammonia production.
Good feeding management includes:
In RAS farming, feeding should match the real treatment capacity of the system.
Stocking density directly affects ammonia production. More fish produce more waste and require stronger filtration, oxygenation, and circulation.
Before increasing fish density, check whether the system has enough:
High-density farming is possible in RAS, but only when the system design supports it.
pH and temperature affect ammonia toxicity and biofilter performance.
When pH and temperature rise, ammonia becomes more toxic. At the same time, nitrifying bacteria also need a suitable pH range to work efficiently.
Good management practices include:
Stable water quality is better than frequent emergency correction.
A RAS farm should not rely only on fish behavior to judge water quality. Ammonia problems should be detected early through regular testing.
Important water quality parameters include:
For commercial farms, automatic monitoring systems and alarm devices can help reduce risk and improve daily management.
A new biofilter needs time to develop enough beneficial bacteria. If too many fish are added before the biofilter is mature, ammonia can rise quickly.
Before full stocking:
Biofilter startup is a critical step in RAS operation.
RAS systems are designed to reuse most of the water, but small water exchange may still be needed in some situations.
Water exchange can help reduce:
However, water exchange should not replace proper biofiltration. If ammonia remains high, the main problem is usually system design, biofilter capacity, feeding management, or stocking density.
| Control Point | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Biofilter | Enough size, mature bacteria, good media |
| Bio media | High surface area and proper flow |
| Mechanical filter | Removes solids before decomposition |
| Oxygen supply | Supports fish and nitrifying bacteria |
| Feeding | Avoid overfeeding and feed waste |
| Stocking density | Match system treatment capacity |
| pH and temperature | Keep stable to reduce ammonia toxicity |
| Monitoring | Test ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH, DO |
| Sludge discharge | Remove waste regularly |
| System design | Balance tanks, pumps, filters, and oxygen |
Removing ammonia in RAS fish farming requires a complete water treatment strategy. The most important solution is a properly designed biofilter with enough bio media and stable oxygen supply. Mechanical filtration, feeding control, stocking density management, and regular water quality monitoring are also essential.
A successful RAS system should remove solid waste quickly, convert ammonia efficiently, maintain stable oxygen, and prevent water quality problems before they become serious.
YUTANK provides customized RAS biofilter and aquaculture filtration equipment, including drum filters, biofilters, PP fish tanks, oxygenation systems, UV sterilizers, and complete RAS water treatment solutions. We can design the system according to your fish species, water volume, stocking density, feeding amount, and project layout.