Movement tracing and analysis of benthic sting ray (Dasyatis akajei) and electric ray (Narke japonica) toward seabed exploration
-
Published:2020-12
Issue:12
Volume:2
Page:
-
ISSN:2523-3963
-
Container-title:SN Applied Sciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:SN Appl. Sci.
Author:
Funano Shun-ichi, Tanaka Nobuyuki, Amaya Satoshi, Hamano Akira, Sasakura Toyoki, Tanaka YoORCID
Abstract
AbstractCreation of a seabed map is a significant task for various activities including safe navigation of vessels, commercial fishing and securing sea-mined resources. Conventionally, search machines including autonomous underwater vehicles or sonar systems have been used for this purpose. Here, we propose a completely different approach to improve the seabed map by using benthic (sting and electric) rays as agents which may explore the seabed by their autonomous behavior without precise control and possibly add extra information such as biota. For the first step to realize this concept, the detail behavior of the benthic rays must be analyzed. In this study, we used a system with a large water tank (10 m × 5 m × 6 m height) to measure the movement patterns of the benthic rays. We confirmed that it was feasible to optically trace the 2D and 3D movement of a sting and an electric ray and that the speed of the rays indicated whether they were skimming slowly over the bottom surface or swimming. Then, we investigated feasibility for measuring the sea bottom features using two electric rays equipped with small pingers (acoustic transmitters) and receivers on a boat. We confirmed tracing of the movements of the rays over the sea bottom for more than 90 min at 1 s time resolution. Since we can know whether rays are skimming slowly over the bottom surface or swimming in water from the speed, this would be applicable to mapping the sea bottom depth. This is the first step to investigate the feasibility of mapping the seabed using a benthic creature.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science NIPPON Foundation and Leave a Nest Co., Ltd. Japan
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Environmental Science,General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering
Reference41 articles.
1. Mayer L, Jakobsson M, Allen G, Dorschel B, Falconer R, Ferrini V, Lamarche G, Snaith H, Weatherall P (2018) The Nippon Foundation—GEBCO seabed 2030 project: the quest to see the world’s oceans completely mapped by 2030. Geosci 8:63 2. Thorsnes T, Bjarnadóttir LR, Jarna A, Baeten N, Scott G, Guinan J, Monteys X, Dove D, Green S, Gafeira J, Stevenson A (2018) National programmes: geomorphological mapping at multiple scales for multiple purposes. In: Micallef A, Krastel S, Savini A (eds) Submarine geomorphology. Springer, Cham, pp 535–552 3. Li D, Wang P, Du L (2019) Path planning technologies for autonomous underwater vehicles: a review. IEEE Access 7:9745–9768 4. Wynn RB, Huvenne VAI, Le Bas TP, Murton BJ, Connelly DP, Bett BJ, Ruhl HA, Morris KJ, Peakall J, Parsons DR, Sumner EJ, Darby SE, Dorrell RM, Hunt JE (2014) Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs): their past, present and future contributions to the advancement of marine geoscience. Mar Geol 352:451–468 5. Sahoo A, Dwivedy SK, Robi PS (2019) Advancements in the field of autonomous underwater vehicle. Ocean Eng 181:145–160
|
|