Inside Unmanned Systems

FEB-MAR 2016

Inside Unmanned Systems provides actionable business intelligence to decision-makers and influencers operating within the global UAS community. Features include analysis of key technologies, policy/regulatory developments and new product design.

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46 unmanned systems inside January/February 2016 MARINE AQUACULTURE-MARICULTURE Photos courtesy of Y. Olsen and the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization and InnovaSea to believe that that's going to be any different going forward." The world's appetite for fish is driving growth in aquaculture and that growth is likely to ac- celerate, Kite-Powell said, but many of the real- ly good, near-shore locations for new operations are either already being farmed or are being used for other things. For that reason he sees marine production moving further away from the coast to open ocean farms, a new form of offshore aquaculture called mariculture. But where will these farms be located and what kind of technology will they need? The Goldilocks Problem While the potential for mariculture is vast, cer- tain environmental conditions are necessary for an open ocean farm to be successful. "I call it the Goldilocks problem," Kelly said. "When you go offshore, if you look at water depth—you can be too shallow, you can be too deep, you can be just right. If you look at cur- rent—you can be too slow, you can be too fast, you can be just right. And the issue on current is that you need a certain amount of current for water exchange (to supply) dissolved oxygen. If you have too much current they (the fish) spend all their energy fighting the current and not growing." There are some 190,000 square kilometers of the world's oceans that are particularly suited to open ocean aquaculture, according to a 2013 study by the United Nation's Food and Agri- culture Organization. To get to that number researcher James Kapetzky started with the world's exclusive economic zones (EEZ), that Sea cages and longlines with oyster ropes for offshore mariculture A diver works on a fi sh enclosure. Source: NOAA (2011). A UN report details the areas suitable for mariculture.

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