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A new coastal crawler prototype to expand the ecological monitoring radius of OBSEA cabled observatory

Authors :
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Doctorat en Ciències del Mar
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria Electrònica
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. SARTI-MAR - Sistemes d'Adquisició Remota de dades i Tractament de la Informació en el Medi Marí
Falahzadehabarghouee, Ahmad
Toma, Daniel
Francescangeli, Marco
Chatzievangelou, Damianos
Nogueras Cervera, Marc
Martínez Padró, Enoc
Carandell Widmer, Matias
Tangerlini, Michael
Thomsen, Laurenz
Picardi, Giacomo
Le Bris, Marie
Aguzzi, Jacopo
Río Fernández, Joaquín del
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Doctorat en Ciències del Mar
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria Electrònica
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. SARTI-MAR - Sistemes d'Adquisició Remota de dades i Tractament de la Informació en el Medi Marí
Falahzadehabarghouee, Ahmad
Toma, Daniel
Francescangeli, Marco
Chatzievangelou, Damianos
Nogueras Cervera, Marc
Martínez Padró, Enoc
Carandell Widmer, Matias
Tangerlini, Michael
Thomsen, Laurenz
Picardi, Giacomo
Le Bris, Marie
Aguzzi, Jacopo
Río Fernández, Joaquín del
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The use of marine cabled video observatories with multiparametric environmental data collection capability is becoming relevant for ecological monitoring strategies. Their ecosystem surveying can be enforced in real time, remotely, and continuously, over consecutive days, seasons, and even years. Unfortunately, as most observatories perform such monitoring with fixed cameras, the ecological value of their data is limited to a narrow field of view, possibly not representative of the local habitat heterogeneity. Docked mobile robotic platforms could be used to extend data collection to larger, and hence more ecologically representative areas. Among the various state-of-the-art underwater robotic platforms available, benthic crawlers are excellent candidates to perform ecological monitoring tasks in combination with cabled observatories. Although they are normally used in the deep sea, their high positioning stability, low acoustic signature, and low energetic consumption, especially during stationary phases, make them suitable for coastal operations. In this paper, we present the integration of a benthic crawler into a coastal cabled observatory (OBSEA) to extend its monitoring radius and collect more ecologically representative data. The extension of the monitoring radius was obtained by remotely operating the crawler to enforce back-and-forth drives along specific transects while recording videos with the onboard cameras. The ecological relevance of the monitoring-radius extension was demonstrated by performing a visual census of the species observed with the crawler’s cameras in comparison to the observatory’s fixed cameras, revealing non-negligible differences. Additionally, the videos recorded from the crawler’s cameras during the transects were used to demonstrate an automated photo-mosaic of the seabed for the first time on this class of vehicles. In the present work, the crawler travelled in an area of 40 m away from the OBSEA, producing an extension of the mo<br />This research was partially funded by JERICO-S3 project (Joint European Research Infrastructure of Coastal Observatories: Science, Service, Sustainability, Call: H2020-INFRAIA-2019-1, Project ID: 871153) and BITER project (grant agreement PID2020-114732RB-C32, financially supported by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación). A.F. was funded by the pre-doctoral fellowship from AGAUR ref. BDNS 474817.<br />Peer Reviewed<br />Postprint (published version)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1379089734
Document Type :
Electronic Resource