ACOUSTICAL MONITORING OF OPEN MEDITERRANEAN SEA FISH FARMS: PROBLEMS AND STRATEGIES



Similar documents
telemetry Rene A.J. Chave, David D. Lemon, Jan Buermans ASL Environmental Sciences Inc. Victoria BC Canada I.

A wave lab inside a coaxial cable


Research Article Seabed Identification and Characterization Using Sonar

Acoustic monitoring of Japanese anchovy Engraulis japonicus post larvae shirasu

HYDROGRAPHIC ECHOSOUNDER FOR SOUNDING INLAND WATERS ANDRZEJ JEDEL, LECH KILIAN, JACEK MARSZAL, ZAWISZA OSTROWSKI, ZBIGNIEW WOJAN, KRZYSZTOF ZACHARIASZ

Acoustic Processor of the MCM Sonar

THE MARIA REGINA DELLA PACE CHURCH IN PERUGIA: ACOUSTIC MEASUREMENTS AND CORRECTION DESIGN

Testing thermo-acoustic sound generation in water with proton and laser beams

DEVELOPMENT OF DEVICES AND METHODS FOR PHASE AND AC LINEARITY MEASUREMENTS IN DIGITIZERS

A PC-BASED TIME INTERVAL COUNTER WITH 200 PS RESOLUTION

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. LAB 1 - Introduction to USRP

Development of Optical Wave Microphone Measuring Sound Waves with No Diaphragm

Spectrum Level and Band Level

RF Measurements Using a Modular Digitizer

Frequency Response of Filters

Synthetic Sensing: Proximity / Distance Sensors

E190Q Lecture 5 Autonomous Robot Navigation

arxiv:astro-ph/ v1 15 Sep 2005

Hydroacoustic surveys of Otsego Lake, 2007

Lab 9: The Acousto-Optic Effect

Electrical tests on PCB insulation materials and investigation of influence of solder fillets geometry on partial discharge

RF Network Analyzer Basics

Instrumentation for Monitoring around Marine Renewable Energy Devices

Aircraft cabin noise synthesis for noise subjective analysis

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF ULTRASOUND ECHO FOR SKIN LESIONS CLASSIFICATION HANNA PIOTRZKOWSKA, JERZY LITNIEWSKI, ELŻBIETA SZYMAŃSKA *, ANDRZEJ NOWICKI

A consistent approach to definitions and symbols in fisheries acoustics

Technical Datasheet Scalar Network Analyzer Model MHz to 40 GHz

Scanning Acoustic Microscopy Training

Ultrasonic Wave Propagation Review

INTERFERENCE OF SOUND WAVES

Type-D EEG System for Regular EEG Clinic

Hunting Bats. Diagnostic Ultrasound. Ultrasound Real-time modality

Optiffuser. High-performance, high bandwidth lightweight 1D diffuser.

Asset Management Made Easier SonarBell Passive Acoustic Marker Speaker : John Pepper

Acousto-optic modulator

Bass Guitar Investigation. Physics 498, Physics of Music Sean G. Ely Randall Fassbinder

Acoustical proprieties of light brick walls and its effects on flanking transmission

Casa da Musica, a new concert hall for Porto, Portugal

Development of the Induction Motor for Machine Tool Spindles and Servo Amplifier SANMOTION S

Engineering Sciences 151. Electromagnetic Communication Laboratory Assignment 3 Fall Term

Active and passive structural health monitoring system based on arrays of ultrasonic guided waves transducers

Sonar Principles:- A typical specification sheet would look like this:-

3D ACOUTIC SIMULATIONS FOR NONLINEAR ACOUTIC CONCEALED WEAPONS DETECTION

Manual Analysis Software AFD 1201

AN Application Note: FCC Regulations for ISM Band Devices: MHz. FCC Regulations for ISM Band Devices: MHz

Introduction to acoustic imaging

INDUCTION MOTOR PERFORMANCE TESTING WITH AN INVERTER POWER SUPPLY, PART 2

Robot Perception Continued

How To Visualize And Analyze Sonar Data

Past, Present and Future

Acoustic GHz-Microscopy: Potential, Challenges and Applications

Ferroxcube. For more information on Product Status Definitions, see page Sep CBW625

Survey Sensors Hydrofest Ross Leitch Project Surveyor

BIOMEDICAL ULTRASOUND

AS COMPETITION PAPER 2008

Doppler. Doppler. Doppler shift. Doppler Frequency. Doppler shift. Doppler shift. Chapter 19

Power Amplifier Gain Compression Measurements

Acoustics of the Teatro Arcimboldi in Milano. Part 2: Scale model studies, final results

The multibeam receiver for SRT, the Sardinia Radio Telescope

PXI. GSM/EDGE Measurement Suite

A receiver TDC chip set for accurate pulsed time-of-flight laser ranging

Wireless Medical Telemetry Laboratory

Keywords: Slot antenna, ultra wideband (UWB), Microstrip line feeding, HFSS Simulation software.

Online Filtering for Radar Detection of Meteors

Experiment 7: Familiarization with the Network Analyzer

Analogue/Digital Analogue and Differential Oscilloscopes

Correlation between OATS, Fully Anechoic Room and GTEM Radiated Emissions

Development of New Inkjet Head Applying MEMS Technology and Thin Film Actuator

Mechanical Characterization of the Damage Process in a Structural Adhesive Joint by Acoustic Emission

NEW FOR Broadband 3G Radar. The evolution of the radar revolution.

Module 13 : Measurements on Fiber Optic Systems

TI GPS PPS Timing Application Note

APPLICATION NOTE ULTRASONIC CERAMIC TRANSDUCERS

Validation of the pyramid tracing algorithm for sound propagation outdoors: comparison with experimental measurements

NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE. Advanced Laboratory, Physics 407, University of Wisconsin Madison, Wisconsin 53706

1. AQUAEXCEL project information. 2. How to access our Research Facility

Current Probes. User Manual

Satellite Altimetry Missions

INTEGRATED SYSTEM FOR DATA ACQUISITION AND NUMERICAL ANALYSIS OF THE SHIP RESISTANCE PERFORMANCE IN THE TOWING TANK OF GALAÞI UNIVERSITY

Training programme on flow measurements

Power System Harmonics

Calibration and Use of a Strain-Gage-Instrumented Beam: Density Determination and Weight-Flow-Rate Measurement

EE 186 LAB 2 FALL Network Analyzer Fundamentals and Two Tone Linearity

Lamb Wave Dispersion Compensation in Piezoelectric Wafer Active Sensor Phased-Array Applications

LABORATORY 2 THE DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIER

DAAD: A New Software for Architectural Acoustic Design

Laboratory 4: Feedback and Compensation

The Use of Computer Modeling in Room Acoustics

Lip-Sync Measurement (AV Delay) for TV Displays Application Note

Analysis of Immunity by RF Wireless Communication Signals

GEOScaN Remote Data Acquisition for Hydrographic, Topographic and GIS Surveying

BM SERIES WAVE COMPACT 6.3 GHZ CW SERIES PULSE RADAR LEVEL INSTRUMENTS (6.3 GHz)

RX-AM4SF Receiver. Pin-out. Connections

INTERFERENCE OF SOUND WAVES

Ultrasonic Guided Waves Evaluation of Trials for Pipeline Inspection

Wireless Broadband: Health & Safety Information

THE SIMULATION OF MOVING SOUND SOURCES. John M. Chowning

MATRIX TECHNICAL NOTES

Annex: VISIR Remote Laboratory

Transcription:

ACOUSTICAL MONITORING OF OPEN MEDITERRANEAN SEA FISH FARMS: PROBLEMS AND STRATEGIES PACS no. 43.30.+m,43.80.+p,43.60.+d Espinosa, Victor 1 ; Soliveres, Ester 1 ; Estruch, Vicente D. 2 ; Redondo, Javier 1 ; Ardid, Miquel 1 ; Alba, Jesús 1 ; Escuder, Eva 1 ; Bou, Manuel 1 1 Grupo de Dispositivos y Sistemas Acústicos y Ópticos, DISAO. Departamento de Física Aplicada; Escuela Politécnica Superior de Gandía; Universidad Politécnica de Valencia Carretera Nazaret-Oliva S/N, Grao de Gandia 46730 (Valencia) España Teléfono (96) 284.93.14 - (96) 284.93.00 Fax : (96) 284.93.09 2 IMPA-UPV, Departamento de Matemática Aplicada, Escuela Politécnica Superior de Gandía; Universidad Politécnica de Valencia. e-mail: vespinos@fis.upv.es, essogon@epsg.upv.es, vdestruc@mat.upv.es, fredondo@fis.upv.es, mardid@fis.upv.es, evescude@fis.upv.es, jesalba@fis.upv.es ABSTRACT We analyse the application in aquaculture of acoustical techniques to monitor the biomass in open sea Mediterranean cages. We describe the problems when applying sonar techniques to the determination of density, behaviour or growth rate of gilthead sea bream in open sea cages in the Mediterranean. We propose different strategies and research lines from first principles, addressed to obtain a simple setup based on no expensive single beam transducers, capable to be installed in production conditions. INTRODUCTION Marine aquaculture is a strong industry and a certain reality in the Mediterranean Sea. For 2005 the production reached the 84,017 tones of European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) and 93,355 tones of the gilt head sea bream (Sparus aurata), produced mainly in Greeceland, Turkey, Italy and Spain [1]. In spite of the sufficient technology to fulfil the production needs, it is necessary to optimize different production factors, not only to improve its economical profitability but also to minimize the possible ecological impacts. Among these factors we must emphasize the feeding strategy, the growing and population monitoring. The daily feeding is estimated in terms of the present biomass (usually expressed in fodder kg/100 kg of fish mass) and it is a function of different factors like the average size of the fishes, the season, the water temperature, etc. Therefore size (mass) and number of fish estimation reveal as a crucial need, not only for the adequate management of the production but also for the determination of the time to bring the product to the market. The traditional method to control the population has been the periodic manual sampling, by fishing a certain number of specimens, which results to be costly in terms of animal stress and workforce costs. Different non-invasive techniques have been assayed to estimate both fish number and size distribution: video monitoring and digital image processing, electromagnetic pass-through frames, acoustical echo sounders, etc. The effectiveness of every method is limited by different factors and one of the most conditioning facts is the necessity of monitoring a large number of cages almost continuously what impulses the achievement of a permanent, and therefore affordable system, suitable to stand long periods of time in a hard environment. We consider that the acoustical techniques provide such capabilities. Nevertheless still much work must be done to achieve all these objectives, since the technology of scientific or commercial

echosounders has been oriented mostly to pelagic surveys, and both the transducers and common algorithms can not be applied immediately to the aquaculture farms control [2]. In the following sections we will expose the problems we have detected in our experiences in open sea cages along the Mediterranean coast of Valencia (Spain), the strategies of study that we suggest, and the design of the experimental setup we have implemented to develop our research. PROBLEMS Our first approach to the biomass estimation in sea cage followed the scheme of Fig.1, Left, where a split beam 120kHz transducer was placed floating on a platform in the surface using a EY500 Simrad echosunder. Our results with this echosounder were inconclusive [2]. We applied the common theory [3] for density estimation through the volume backscattering and the average Target Strength (TS) of the breams, but it soon evidenced that the problem to solve was not simple: - Several single traces of fishes were detected, but mainly in the distance closer to the transducer, where the far field condition was hardly achieved. Even within this condition, the TS values given by the scientific echosounders must be treated with caution for the case of near range data [4]. Max. cage diameter 30 m Near field 7º Far Field Beam max. diameter 0.6m Fig.1 Left: First experimental setup with a scientific echosounder EY500, the beam width was 7 º. Right: Typical echogram of the EY500, notice the sea bottom echo in red. - The echosounder applied only the usual Time Varying Gain (TVG) correction without having the possibility of correcting the strong beam extinction inside the cage due to the high fish density [5]. - The insonified volume was small and the extrapolation to rest of the cage volume difficult because of the behaviour of the school and the movement of the net with the sea currents. - The stability of the transducer was affected by rapid oscillations due to small wind waves typical of the Mediterranean, and even more, it was practically thrown out of the water when the breams were fed during the summer and their attitude is especially anxious. - The TS results evidenced the difficulty to assign values to fish size classes, as stated in [6], and there was a total lack of studies and models about the acoustical properties of the Mediterranean species of interest in aquaculture. We reconsidered our investigations and realised about the necessity of facing the problem from the very beginning, with a double goal: first, to study theoretically and experimentally the 2

acoustical properties of Mediterranean species like the gilthead sea bream and the problem of size and density determination in a dense bank, and second, to define the characteristics of the system to perform the monitoring of the cages in production conditions. STRATEGIES We made the definition of the experimental equipment for our fundamental studies starting with the considerations about the position of transducers and we conclude that in production conditions the transducer must be permanently placed in each cage, its position must permit the works of fish extraction and feeding, using an only transponder and acquisition/processing system. The position of the fishes in the cages oscillates from the bottom-middle to the very top in the surface, so the far field condition is easily achieved many of the times with the transducer placed in the bottom of the net, permitting to monitor during the feeding, when the bank concentrates at the surface. The need of a high number of transducers in a farm with dozens of cages, and the severe environmental conditions which could cause their periodic replacement, lead us to consider the evaluation of commercial low cost transducers in the range between 50 and 200 khz, like the WS 90-36 of Lowrance, working at 192 khz and a -3 db angle of 20º with a limit of working power of 75 w. Airmar dual frequency (50-205 khz) transducers with higher limit powers were also evaluated. During this evaluation we used a basic configuration based on a function generator, an RF power amplifier ENI 240L, an 100 MHz 4 Channel Digital Oscilloscope Tektronix TDS 3014 and a laptop. The four channels allowed us to monitor three identical transducers; two in the bottom (emitter and receiver) and another one receiving at the surface (see. Fig 2). Fig.2 Left: Second experimental setup with function generator, digital oscilloscope and RF power amplifier with different low-cost commercial transducers. Right above: Correspondent suggested inverted setup with permanent no expensive single beam transducers placed at the bottom with a beam width of 20º. Right below: typical time series record of the receiving transducer at the bottom of a sea cage with gilthead sea breams; the first pulse correspond to the side lobe emission and gives the time reference, the second highest one about 13 ms is the surface echo. This setup permitted us to evaluate the necessary pulse amplitude to cross the bank in different situations, and the performance of the different transducers, we conclude that for feeding conditions a 600w rms power and a dual operation 50/200 khz provide us with the necessary amplitude and higher penetration vs. spatial resolution. We also realized that the effect of waves 3

was less important with the inverted scheme for the fish echoes below the surface than for the case of the floating transducer. This basic echosounder was capable to monitor the fish bank movements inside the cage, important to evaluate its interest in the feeding. We have also determined the sampling needs for acquisition of the echoes series to specify a card-based portable system to perform analysis and representation in a laptop. We found very suitable the use of a National Instruments portable PXI-1031DC with NI PXI-ExpressCard8360 to connect through USB to a laptop, an 100MS/s arbitrary function generator NI PXI-5412, and NI PXI-5102, 2 channel, 20 Ms/s digitizer card both synchronized through the same built-in clock reference. The bus connection between the PXI and the laptop permits to acquire long time series and represent the processed data like echograms through the Labview programming environment. The algorithms are therefore provided by the user and can take into account all the desired phenomena like, e.g., the beam extinction compensation. Together with the ENI 240L amplifier this user-purpose configurable system will allow us to continue our in situ investigations, but it will also provide us with the capability of using special programmable functions to develop a laboratory research in tanks to acoustically characterise the species of interest. Fig.3 Left: Laptop controlled NI-PXI generation and acquisition system with RF power amplifier with different commercial transducers and hydrophone. Right: works in the floating sea cages With this aim, we have already implemented the methodology described in [7] and references there in, based in the study of the changes of the properties of a reverberant cavity in the presence of scatterers, and improved it introducing the use of broadband signals like time stretched pulses (TSP) and pseudo-random maximum length sequences (MLS). This technique precises of the use of omnidirectional transducers with a planar response in the band of interest and allows obtaining the total TS from sets of impulses responses of the reverberant cavity while the fishes are swimming inside. The analysis of the total TS as a function of frequency provides a tool for shape and size characterization of the fishes. We have prepared our 3 installations with 9 identical 2x2x1 m tanks to measure different size classes of breams, from 25 g to 250 g. 4

CONCLUSIONS We have initiated a research line in a complex problem and developed a complete experimental system to perform fundamental investigations addressed to apply acoustical techniques to the control of open sea farms in de Mediterranean. We have identified the main theoretical and technical challenges and proposed a particular configuration for the production needs. Our work in laboratory tanks is now involved in the acoustical characterisation of the gilt head sea bream (Sparus auratus, Linnaeus 1758). ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This work has been supported by the Generalitat Valenciana in the frame of the Project GV06/097. REFERENCIAS [1] APROMAR, La acuicultura marina de peces en España, 2006, www.apromar.es, 2006. [2] V. Espinosa, J. Ramis and J. Alba, Evaluación de la sonda ultrasónica EY-500 de Simrad para el control de explotaciones de dorada Sparus auratus Linnaeus, 1758, Bol. Inst. Esp. Oceanogr. 18 (1-4), 15-19, 2002 [3] MacLennan D.V. y E.J. Simmonds, Fisheries acoustics. Chapman & Hall, London, 1991. [4] Furusawa M., Hamada M. and Aoyama C., Near range errors in sound scattering measurements of fish. Fisheries Science, Vol. 65 (1), 109-116, 1999. [5] Kenneth G. Foote, Correcting acoustic measurements of scatterer density for extinction, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. Vol. 88, No. 33, September, 1990. [6] Methodology for Target Strength Measurements, ICES cooperative Research Report No. 235, Ed. E. Ona, 1999 [7] S.G. Conti, P. Roux, Ch. Fauvel, B.D. Maurer, D.A. Demer Acoustical monitoring of fish density, behavior, and growth rate in a tank, Aquaculture, 251, 314-323, 2006. 5