Atlantic salmon

Salmo salar

Also known as: Sea-run salmon, Bay salmon, Black salmon

Plan a system with Atlantic salmon

Quick facts

Adult size
75 cm, 5000 g typical harvest weight
Days to harvest
540 to 1095 days from fingerling
Lifespan (max)
up to 13 years
Diet
carnivore
Temperature class
cold-water
Difficulty
advanced

Water parameters

Temperature range
220°C (optimum 14°C)
pH
6.5 to 8
Hardness
3 to 20 dGH
Minimum tank
2000 L per individual at harvest size

Feed and growth

Feed protein
45% target
Daily feed (warm water)
1.20% of body weight per day
Daily feed (cool water)
0.80% of body weight per day
Max stocking density
60 g per litre of system water

A 5000g adult eats about 60.0 g of feed per day at optimum temperature. For a roster of 10 fish at adult size, that's around 600 g of feed daily.

Legality

Aquaculture and possession rules vary by jurisdiction and change over time. This table reflects regulations as of the verified date on each row. Verify with your local fisheries or wildlife authority before stocking.

Jurisdiction Status Notes
California permit required verified 2026-05-13
Washington prohibited Washington state banned net-pen Atlantic salmon farming after 2017 escape event verified 2026-05-13
Tasmania permit required Major aquaculture industry in Tasmania; commercial licenses required verified 2026-05-13

Jurisdictions not listed here default to "check local regulations". A non-listing is not a green light; rules in your specific county or municipality may apply.

Habitat and origin

Native to rivers draining into the North Atlantic Ocean, from Portugal and Spain to Norway and Iceland in Europe and from Connecticut to Labrador in North America. The species (Salmo salar) is anadromous in the wild: fish spawn in freshwater rivers, juveniles spend 1-3 years in fresh water as parr, then undergo smoltification and migrate to the ocean, returning to their natal river to spawn after 1-3 years at sea. Atlantic salmon is the most commercially important salmonid in the world, with global production exceeding 3 million tonnes annually from marine net-pen farms, primarily in Norway, Chile, Scotland, Canada, and Tasmania. The freshwater phase of production (smolt rearing) and the rapidly growing sector of full-cycle land-based recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) make Atlantic salmon relevant to freshwater culture and, at commercial scale, to integrated aquaponics-style production.

Climate and outdoor ponds

Climate classification
cold-water (cool water required, dies in heat)
Outdoor pond zones (USDA)
3 to 7 (winter low around -40°C or warmer)
Heating in a temperate climate
Not required (handles seasonal cool periods)
Cooling in a temperate climate
Required if your summer water temperatures exceed the upper tolerance

Zone bounds reflect year-round outdoor pond viability with no active heating. Anywhere outside the bounded zone, the species can still be kept in an indoor heated tank or a seasonally-managed system. Verify your specific microclimate, as a sheltered yard zone can run a half-zone warmer than the regional rating.

Care notes

Not a typical home aquaponics species due to the complexity and scale required, but included because land-based Atlantic salmon RAS facilities represent a fast-growing aquaculture sector and several commercial operations are exploring integration of plant production with salmon waste streams. The species requires cold water (814°C for optimal growth), high dissolved oxygen (above 7 mg/L), and pristine water quality (ammonia below 0.5 mg/L, CO2 below 15 mg/L). Growth in freshwater RAS is moderate: smolts reach 80150 g in 12-18 months, and post-smolts can be grown to 35 kg harvest size entirely in freshwater at 1214°C over 24-36 months. FCR is excellent at 1.1-1.3 on high-quality salmon pellet (40-48% protein, 20-30% fat). Stocking density in well-managed RAS: 40-80 g/L with supplemental oxygen. Disease management is demanding: ISA, BKD, sea lice (marine), and Saprolegnia require biosecurity protocols. Smolts are available from commercial hatcheries but in quantities suited to large operations. The economics require volume. For home aquaponics, rainbow trout or arctic char are far more practical cold-water alternatives.

Plan a system with Atlantic salmon

Verified against: fao-fisheries-aquaculture, iucn-redlist. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.

Further reading