A Review of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Usage as an Environmental Survey Tool within Tidal Stream Environments

Author:

Slingsby James1ORCID,Scott Beth E.2,Kregting Louise3ORCID,McIlvenny Jason1,Wilson Jared4,Williamson Benjamin J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Research Institute, University of the Highlands and Islands, Thurso KW14 7EE, UK

2. School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB24 2TZ, UK

3. Plant & Food Research, Mt Albert Research Centre, Auckland 1025, New Zealand

4. Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, Aberdeen AB11 9DB, UK

Abstract

Tidal energy is a rapidly developing area of the marine renewable energy sector that requires converters to be placed within areas of fast current speeds to be commercially viable. Tidal environments are also utilised by marine fauna (marine mammals, seabirds and fish) for foraging purposes, with usage patterns observed at fine spatiotemporal scales (seconds and metres). An overlap between tidal developments and fauna creates uncertainty regarding the environmental impact of converters. Due to the limited number of tidal energy converters in operation, there is inadequate knowledge of marine megafaunal usage of tidal stream environments, especially the collection of fine-scale empirical evidence required to inform on and predict potential environmental effects. This review details the suitability of using multirotor unmanned aerial vehicles within tidal stream environments as a tool for capturing fine-scale biophysical interactions. This includes presenting the advantages and disadvantages of use, highlighting complementary image processing and automation techniques, and showcasing the limited current examples of usage within tidal stream environments. These considerations help to demonstrate the appropriateness of unmanned aerial vehicles, alongside applicable image processing, for use as a survey tool to further quantify the potential environmental impacts of marine renewable energy developments.

Funder

Bryden Centre project

European Union’s INTERREG VA Programme

Special EU Programmes Body

a Royal Society Research

NERC VertIBase project

UK Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy’s offshore energy Strategic Environmental Assessment programme

EPSRC Supergen ORE Hub

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference99 articles.

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3. Investigating Biophysical Linkages at Tidal Energy Candidate Sites: A Case Study for Combining Environmental Assessment and Resource Characterisation;Scherelis;Renew. Energy,2020

4. Zambrano, C. (2016, January 16–18). Lessons Learned from Subsea Tidal Kite Quarter Scale Ocean Trials. Proceedings of the WTE16—Second Workshop on Wave and Tidal Energy, Valdivia, Chile.

5. Ocean Energy Development in Europe: Current Status and Future Perspectives;Magagna;Int. J. Mar. Energy,2015

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