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Tuesday 9 October 2018

Monitoring Systems (I-VMS) for fishing boats under 12m



Defra are seeking views on proposals to introduce Inshore Vessel Monitoring Systems (I-VMS).




The Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) are seeking views on proposals to introduce Inshore Vessel Monitoring Systems (I-VMS) for all licensed British fishing boats under 12 metres in length, operating in English waters. This also covers English boats operating outside of English waters.

VMS has been used as a monitoring system for UK vessels of 12 metres and over since 2013. The system records the location, speed and heading of a vessel using GPRS technology. Introducing I-VMS for under 12 metre vessels will provide a more accurate picture on fishing location and activity, which will help inform future fisheries management and sustainability.

The data could also allow fishermen to market their produce as sustainably caught, providing consumers with greater awareness of where their fish has come from and helping them to make more informed decisions.

Fisheries Minister George Eustice said:

“Monitoring systems play a crucial role in developing a framework for fisheries management that is both profitable and sustainable – and that allows all sections of our fleet to thrive.

“I now encourage everyone with an interest to have their say by responding to the consultation.”

It is proposed that the initial cost and installation of the equipment will be met by the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund in order to minimise cost to industry.

The six week consultation will close on 14 November 2018.

Interested parties are invited to share their views either online or by post to:

UK Fisheries Control and Enforcement Team
Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
2nd Floor Foss House
1 – 2 Peasholme Green
York
YO1 7PX

Monday 8 October 2018

Newlyn Fishermen's Forum meeting 12th October at 10am.


A reminder to all fishermen who are members of the Newlyn Fishermen's Forum that there is a meeting on Friday this week to discuss the current development plans for the harbour car park, the Strand, Sandy Cove and more - a chance to meet with others to discuss the issues that might affect day to day operations in the port over the next few years.

Monday morning market in Newlyn.




Making a pre-dawn entrance, the beam trawler James RH Stevenson makes for a berth in Newlyn...


as buyers begin to browse the boxes...


of hake from the netting fleet that landed over the weekend...


including the Ajax...


with a relatively settled weekend weather-wise there was plenty of line caught and inshore fish on the market this morning like this cracking little red bream...


and even a few herring...


along with the usual fayre of rays...


mackerel...


and pristine pollack...


with some of the handline boats getting good hauls of jigged squid...


and mixed sizes of mackerel...


there were good supplies of line caught bass...


and top quality big squid...


some of the bass sporting their distinctive Line Caught tags which allow customers to ID the actual boat and fisherman that caught the fish...


looks like the Joy of Ladram might have deployed nets to target big flats like these turbot...


Colin looks happy with his first purchases of the day for Mousehole Fish...


checking out some of the lots about to be auctioned...


with so much fish landed the second auction took place in the grading room - good to see young Geoff spreading Ocean Fish tallies on the fish again...


while auctioneer Ollie counts up the next lot of hake for auction...


there were plenty of John Dory on the market from a number of boats that fish in very different areas...


saithe and scad - two species that 99% of the population will have never eaten, yet in Germany saithe is as highly though of as cod is in the UK...


the Ajax landed a few big blue sharks...


and spurdogs...


every trip sees the netters land a handful of 6kilo plus hale...


while the beamer Filadelfia had a good mix of traditional beam trawler trips in the shape of monk tails...


and megrim sole...


and, unusually for a beam trawler,  a dozen boxes of John Dory


these were some of the best of the squid landed...


this little lot would make an excellent 'fish box' for someone this week...


Padstow registered Charisma sporting her new livery, logo, name and number...


watched ever as ever by Tom.

Sunday 7 October 2018

Sunny Sunday in Newlyn



This sunny Sunday morning finds the Padstow registered PW45 Charisma looking smart in her new Waterdance company colours...




as is the newly painted netter Stelissa...


Irish trawler DA33 Arkh Angel laying to the stone quay after towing...



DA125 Resilient to Newlyn from the cuttle grounds off Devon...


she is fitted with three rudders to improve manoeuvrability when towing her heavy twin-rig trawls


several of the netting fleet are already back in port over the weekend...


seems like a millennium since the Millennia went up on the slip...


still life...


everything you need for a crabber's pot making kit...


the wheelhouse is now taking shape...


on Mr Hosking's multi-purpose inshore boat...


plenty of room left on the deck for pots and nets if needed...


though her trawling days are now over for good.

Saturday 6 October 2018

Fish recognition challenge.

Not for the first time Australian fisheries technology is leading the way in providing the latest technology to collect and collate fishing data in order to protect the livelihoods of fishermen and fish stocks.


Wanda in training for fish recognition challenge



The automated identification of harvested fish could improve confidence in the fishing sector and reduce the cost of surveillance

The use of artificial intelligence (AI) is coming to the Australian fisheries sector in the form of new software that can identify which fish are being landed on board a vessel based on video from electronic monitoring.

Called ‘Wanda’, the program uses advanced mathematical and computing techniques such as deep learning – a subset of AI – to automatically detect and identify fish species.

Wanda is the product of a CSIRO research collaboration between its Oceans and Atmosphere and Data61 divisions, with the Australian Fisheries Management Authority (AFMA) providing imagery to train the new software.

CSIRO fisheries scientist Rich Little says the software has so far been trained to recognise several species, including Yellowfin Tuna, with about 85 per cent accuracy. But with access to more images to help train Wanda, he anticipates this will increase to more than 90 per cent accuracy.

The development of Wanda began in 2016 when CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere fisheries scientists Rich Little, Geoff Tuck and Rob Campbell teamed with CSIRO Data61’s Dadong Wang to explore the potential of a machine-learning product for species identification in fisheries.

In demand

Currently, electronic monitoring imagery is reviewed by people who identify different fish species. “But we realised this was a constraint on the current technology, and discovered there was a very large need nationally and internationally for our new program to automatically identify fish species and to remove this human element,” Rich Little says.

“As a commercial product the market is quite small; the most likely customers are typically regulatory agencies and resource managers.”

However, the potential application of the technology continues to expand as more countries introduce on-board electronic monitoring in their fisheries. Wanda sits amongst a cohort of similar initiatives being developed around the world, including those led by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization and another led by Queensland’s Department of Agriculture and Fisheries.

In Australia, AFMA has mandatory electronic monitoring on 75 vessels operating in the Eastern Tuna and Billfish Fishery, the Western Tuna and Billfish Fishery and the Gillnet, Hook and Trap Fishery. Electronic monitoring technology potentially offers a cost-effective alternative to aspects of the human on-board observer programs that still operate in many fisheries.

Human observers are required to monitor a certain percentage of activity in various fisheries to meet assessment targets and enable effective data analysis. This can vary greatly – anywhere from five to almost 100 per cent of activity, depending on the fishery and what observers are looking for, with an average of about 10 per cent.

Likewise, only a small proportion (usually 10 per cent) of the thousands of hours of video collected by electronic monitoring is actually reviewed. The reasons for this vary; for example, only a small percentage of footage actually captures fishing activity. However, AI has a real potential to streamline and reduce the reviewing costs, while increasing the amount of video actually reviewed.

There is potential for electronic monitoring to be used in other Australian Commonwealth and state fisheries. It has also recently become mandatory in some New Zealand and Chilean fisheries.

“It’s a growing trend, worldwide,” Rich Little says. “And with the right training, Wanda will be able to assess all of the available video, rather than a small fraction. We think we will be able to help further reduce the costs of monitoring through the automatic identification of species.”

Transparency

While species identification features will begin with target catch species, it is likely to expand to byproduct and bycatch species as well as threatened, endangered and protected species.

Rich Little says increasing the amount of fishing time actually scrutinised has the potential to significantly increase public confidence in the fisheries sector. From both a management and an industry perspective, it will provide greater evidence of compliance – that fishers are doing the right thing, and are known to be doing so.

From the initial concept, when it came to developing the software Rich Little and Geoff Tuck joined with Dadong Wang at Data61 for expertise in the computer vision and machine learning processes.

Initial video training has used test data from AFMA, but really requires thousands of images all up. But it’s not just a matter of identifying a fish. The program needs to be able to identify where in each frame the fish is – often as it is sliding across the deck of a working fishing boat.

In the early stages of training, this means someone needs to find the fish and graphically put a binding box around it so that Wanda can ‘learn’ where the fish is and what it looks like.

The more images used in training, the more accurate the results. While imaging technology continues to make huge gains, the sophistication required to distinguish certain species is likely to make it impossible for wholesale use.

Recognising the long-term savings available to industry of this technology, AFMA is keen to work with CSIRO to provide access to imagery from its Eastern Tuna and Billfish Fishery (ETBF), which has the longest and most extensive video dataset in Commonwealth fisheries.

“As the ETBF is a longline fishery, it generally brings fish on board one at a time – unlike a trawl fishery – and this will make training and identification easier,” Rich Little says.  Swordish, and Yellowfin, Albacore and Big Eye Tuna are likely to be the focus of the initial AFMA case study designed to demonstrate Wanda’s effectiveness.

A postdoctoral researcher will be employed as part of a three-year project to refine Wanda. But with the new dataset, Rich Little says results with high accuracy could be achievable in six to eight months.


Significant issues of bycatch, biosecurity and environmental benefits are being addressed through new technology that gives trawl-net fishers ‘eyes in the net’.

While camera technology is becoming an essential part of on-board monitoring for fisheries compliance, it is also being applied to improve the efficiency of trawl fishing.

DigiCatch is the name of a new ‘precision fishing technology’ developed by US company SmartCatch. CEO Mark Dahm presented at last year’s Seafood Directions conference, saying the system has provided a two per cent reduction in bycatch for some users, which could be worth up to $100,000 to a trawl business. It provides ‘eyes in the net’ via real-time, high-definition video that allows fishers to see what they are capturing – at depths of more than 900 metres – before the catch is landed on deck.

Combined with another SmartCatch innovation, SmartNet, fishers can release non-target species from the net underwater through a pre-catch release system. Mark Dahm said it allowed fishers to maximise catches of target species within quota, while avoiding non-target species that could lead to fines or potential fishery closures.

Additional digital sensors also convey information about salinity, depth, location and acidity – information that is vital for biosecurity and traceability, which is becoming increasingly important in seafood markets as consumers demand detail on seafood origin.

Mark Dahm, whose background in technology includes more than 25 years working in Silicon Valley, in the US, said it was his passion for the sea that led him to apply his technology skills to the fishing industry.

The DigiCatch technology was voted the Gold Winner for Innovation in Sustainable Solutions in the 2016 Edison Awards and is being used by some major players in the North American seafood industry fishing in the Bering Sea.

While the technology has initially been expensive, costing about US$40,000 (A$53,7500) a system, Mark Dahm said the price was fast coming down and could be retrofitted to existing gear. Eventually, he said, the system could become cost-neutral as the data recorded by the technology builds and becomes more valuable.

“Data is the oil of our time and we believe the major commercial seafood companies, the government agencies and fishery councils will pay for that data and subsidise these devices on the boats so it becomes standard practice,” he said.

The technology could help sustain the fishing sector as well as fish stocks, helping fishers comply with regulations while providing consumers with the sustainable seafood they sought.

“We start right here with what begins with DigiCatch in the net capturing data at the point of capture ... and ultimately it’s about a great piece of protein on the plate,” he said. Mark Dahm said Smartcatch delivered on a triple-bottom-line objective to bring economic, ecological and social benefits.

“There is huge economic impact in being able to bring this type of technology to the seafood industry; there is the ecological component of building sustainable ocean technology to save our fish species and make our supply chain more efficient; and then there’s the social and the food security aspect ... and as we know, seafood is really good for us.”

More information and the full story from FRDC.

Friday 5 October 2018

Electronic monitoring and movement analysis in fisheries; applications of emerging science



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Electronic technologies now enable us to track and monitor predators of different types, including individual animals (mammals, birds, fish) and fishing vessels. This enables scientists to better understand animal and fleet behaviour and build more realistic models. It also enables managers to better understand spatial, temporal and operational aspects of fisheries at the individual vessel level, and potentially to improve quota management and accountability through accurate tracking of retained and discarded catches. This session aims to further the scientific applications of such technologies through consideration of how to maximise and best utilise the information which can be gleaned from them.


For vessels, technology-based at-sea monitoring has evolved over the past twenty years. It comprises a diverse set of tools, at various states of maturity, with, for instance, Vessel Monitoring Systems (VMS) and electronic logbooks widely installed on larger fishing vessels, and the increasing application of closed-circuit television (CCTV; also called EM in the US) aboard vessels of all sizes and which has the potential to address scientific and management information needs.


For animals, increased miniaturisation, as well as improvements in data storage and energy consumption have allowed development of sophisticated tags capable of recording multiple parameters over long periods of time for many types of organisms (fish, mammals, bird, cephalopods, etc).


The need for spatial information in fisheries science has stimulated the use of positional data to produce fishing effort maps by filtering VMS points directly by vessels’ speeds or through more sophisticated models. Knowledge beyond the presence or absence of fishing can be derived from the analysis of tracking data and enriched the understanding of fisheries dynamics and fisheries management. Modelling the behaviour of individual vessels elucidates the different strategies adopted by fishers.


Movement analysis allows investigation of individual and collective dynamics and may also reveal processes driving the movement of predators, including fishing vessels. Trajectory analysis brings novel mathematical concepts to the study of fisheries ecology and fishing fleet dynamics. Several mathematical formulations of trajectory analysis, and many models to capture associated movement dynamics, are available. However, the nature of tracking data and movement often make the application of existing operational methods difficult. Similar models and algorithms are now being applied to video captured aboard vessels to identify bycatch, fishing events, and quantify discards. Could these data could be used to provide currently lacking model validation at the individual vessel level?


The objectives of the theme session are thus to promote and share the ongoing progresses made on technology-based at-sea fishery monitoring, and on the analysis of movement in fisheries science and fleet dynamics, and to explore opportunities for further integration of data collection, and analytical approaches and innovation.


Contributions regarding the following, and related topics and are welcome in this session:


• Evaluation of the accuracy and precision of data gathered through electronic monitoring technologies for estimation of resource utilisation, catch and bycatch and spatial qualities.


• Understanding and quantification of interactions between vessels and adjustment of fishing effort estimation. Can we anticipate fishers' reaction to alternative management measures?


• How can we encourage research on and development of electronic monitoring technology and its applications to improve data quality, drive innovation and cross-sectorial collaboration, and promote best practices?


• How can spatial information be integrated into the management/advisory process and marine spatial planning?


• Can data collection tags attached to predators be used to assess the distribution and abundance of their prey?


• Development of analytical tools, models and technologies – implications and needs for future research, development, and advisory structures


• How effective are current technologies and analytical approaches in meeting management/advisory information needs? Are these approaches also effective in meeting industry operational requirements? What improvements are needed?


Wednesday, 26 September

09:00-15:30
Lecture Hall C

Thursday 4 October 2018

CFPO response to the Government's Brexit Fisheries white paper

Read CFPO chairman, Paul Trebilcock's response to the Government's Brexit Fisheries White Paper.