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Blog Automated Green House Blog:3 - Fish Feeding of the Future
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  • Author Author: m.ratcliffe
  • Date Created: 13 Aug 2015 9:21 PM Date Created
  • Views 2198 views
  • Likes 3 likes
  • Comments 11 comments
  • adapted_greenhouse
  • raspberypi
  • arduino
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Automated Green House Blog:3 - Fish Feeding of the Future

m.ratcliffe
m.ratcliffe
13 Aug 2015

With not having the Competition Kit arrive yet, this blog will be about some of the other projects I am working on relating to automation.

 

See the main Blog for updates:

 

Automated Green House Blog's Home Page

 

Some Basic Information:

 

>156 Billion KG of fish reared annual [thats more than beef!] [1]

>Optimum feeding regimes can increase productivity by 40%, food efficiency by 20% compared to conventional once per day feeding [2]

>There are many variables to consider when feeding fish [3]

 

Feeding Fish Is a very time consuming task, takes skilled operators to visit sites multiple times a day and is prone to human error. A computer could perform this task day in day out repeatable, efficiently and without human interaction, saving time food and increasing yields from a system drastically.

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Note: On Video I say FeedForwards, I mean Open-Loop Control [It had been a Long day]

 

I have thought of two solutions to this problem, a open loop controller and a vision based feedback controller.

 

Open Loop:

[Wiring Diagrams and Code to Implement this on a arduino Unu will be included soon]


Human input to the controller

>Fish Breed

>Fish age

>Number of Fish

 

This Controller will then take measurements of the environmental variables [mainly temperature] and adjust:

>Feeding Spacing

>Feed type [what mechanical feeder to feed from]

 

 

Closed Loop

The benefit of implementing a controller this way is we no longer need to define the system in as much detail. it is fully aware of the eating habits of the fish.

[Implemented on RaspberyPI using opencv and usb webcam]

 

The Final unit will be able to:

>Estimate the size of the fish

>Feed the fish at the correct intervals and feed until the food demands of the fish decrease [it means their stomach is almost full]

>Feeding amount per serving

>Alert the farmer to any problems

     -Change in eating habbits

     -Bloated

     -disease

 

 

Work Done So far:

>Built temperature compensated open loop controller

>Built the basic vision part of the camera control [it can detect number of food pellets]

 

Here is a video of the camera gui and explication of how it works:

 

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Work To Do:

>Improve Blob Detection Techniques used

>See if we can get the camera to read the fish size when they come to feed + check for bloating /disease

>Code in the rate of food consumption [Blobs disappearing every seconds lets say]

>Put the control units in a better housing with a GUI

 

 

 

The Systems in the video prove the basic concept will work, they need a lot more work to get them to do the best job they can.

 

What I am Stuck on right now:

 

I have written another basic vision code that I want to implement onto a arduino based MCU. These units cannot do any heavy image processing [blob detection etc] the plan is to combine a camera with a arduino over serial, asses the incoming serial data on a pixel by pixel level. Something like this below:

 

[r=red competent of pixel, g=green component,b=blue component] where r,b,g will be at locations in the data packet I hope.

 

          If (r>2*g && r>2*b) {

               PixelCount = ++;

                                            };

 

What this does is assesses if a pixel is very red [the food pellets are red] and adds the total number of pixels in the picture up. Run the scrip at the beginning of the day to remove any red pixels from random red objects in the camera view that are not food. [lets call this count StaticSystemPixels].

 

        FoodPixels=(PixelCount-StaticSystmPixels)

 

And then add the correct amount of food to keep the FoodPixelCount at a predetermined  value, we can tell by the duty cycle of the mechanical feeder what the demand is and watch out for it decreasing as a sign that the fish have eaten the right amount of food.

 

I have written this sketch in Processing on a linux desktop and the theory works well, but I know nothing about the arduino and camera integration. I want to do this in real time without saving the image. So What I would like to do is asses the incoming serial data as it reaches the arduino

 

Is this possible? Am I right in thinking that the camera will transmit over serial whole pixel data sets , ie packet one contains information for pixel 1,2,3,4 or will it transmit in a way that each pixel will be spread across different packets? and can I do some quick assessment of this packet before the next one comes in?

 

Any help on this would be great!

 

 

 

I will be uploading the codes and tutorials about how to make everything to:

 

www.michaelratcliffe.com/projects    [Give me a few days to comment the codes and upload them]

 

I cant wait to get the competition kit,

Michael

 

References:

[1] FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Department “THE STATE OF WORLD FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE” 2012

[2]  Steven Craig “Understanding Fish Nutrition, Feeds, and Feeding”    2002

[3] S. J. Yeoh, F. S. Taip  “Development of Automatic Feeding Machine for Aquaculture Industry” 2010

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Top Comments

  • m.ratcliffe
    m.ratcliffe over 10 years ago +1
    RWReynolds To reply to Rick [I didnt realise the video goes live before I publish the Blog] "Amazing Michael! This is a system you've used in production, correct? Did you build and write the software for…
  • m.ratcliffe
    m.ratcliffe over 10 years ago in reply to RWReynolds +1
    It works ok, but like most things it takes a couple of revisions to perfect it. The Temperature controller is Arduino Uno based because it is easy for anyone to understand and I want to see this information…
  • m.ratcliffe
    m.ratcliffe over 10 years ago in reply to RWReynolds +1
    Doc Brown as in back to the future, ive been called worse lol What is it that made the connection? Ray Mears is my usual nickname. I did a degree in mechanical engineering and then a research one in electronic…
  • RWReynolds
    RWReynolds over 10 years ago in reply to m.ratcliffe

    You need one of these.

    http://gizmodo.com/the-laser-guided-robo-milker-is-the-future-of-dairy-1183979314

     

    Best I can tell is that a US and UK acre are the same.

     

    We have well water and it tends to be very acidic. So I will implement only the pH up system and save some effort and money. I'll have to do some testing and research.

     

    Let me know in the TDS sensor. I've been looking at some and the price range is pretty wide. Would be good to know if some of the less expensive models work well enough.

     

    Right now the challenge is my only project. That and recovering from the ankle surgery. I also do this at work and have several interesting projects there. Mostly utilizing the Raspberry Pi. But they are all under NDA agreements and I can't really talk about them. I do have one coming up that should be very cool. Working with cryogenic storage systems. I'm looking forward to that. On a personal level, I've just really gotten back into it all so I have lots of stuff in my head and not much in the works. And before the surgery I couldn't get around very well and the pain just kind of saps your motivation. It's amazing how much we take for granted the simple act of walking. This challenge has been very motivating.  I can see doing a lot once I can get back on my feet. First things would be some automation around here to help with our horses and chickens and such. And more work on the hydroponics/aquaponics stuff.

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  • m.ratcliffe
    m.ratcliffe over 10 years ago in reply to RWReynolds

    I was never that good in uni tbh, I spent most of my time making other things than working for the tests. I was thinking of a 20' container for the electronics lab, but a 40' would make an epic room for a bit of everything. I's an american acre the same as a British, if so that is a decent size for playing around on.

     

    I always find I need to PH down and never up in aquaponics so you could cut your number of pumps in half if you have the same situation, I'm working on a PPM meter now using an american plug as the sensor [they are cheap, corrosion resistance and always the same spec] If it works i'll upload it to the Blog. What other projects are you working on?

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  • m.ratcliffe
    m.ratcliffe over 10 years ago in reply to DAB

    Thanks for the feedback Dab, i'm hoping to automate the entire farming process eventually [well the cattle rotation, aquaponics production and irrigation of pastures] so that one man can farm 14 acres in a few hours on a weekly visit. I'm running a simulation to optimise this and work out some basic ratios [pasture to aquaponics etc] but the outlay to test the idea is very expensive here in the UK, land is a crazy price.

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  • RWReynolds
    RWReynolds over 10 years ago in reply to m.ratcliffe

    Had not heard of Ray Mears, but that fits as well. lol...

     

    Ok, you do have some formal ed. Cool, you are certainly putting the "learning how to learn" aspect to great use.

     

    I will definitely be talking to you concerning the Aquaponics systems. Seems you have done a great deal of research and work in this area.

     

    I am going to start hitting the Raod Tests as well. I see some good stuff come across there. And I love the shipping container idea. I have designs on the same thing here. I have about 13 acres so plenty of room to install one. And I've seen some incredible dwellings created for shipping containers online. Seems it would be very easy t build a fine lab in one. I'm also a musician and one 40' container could easily support a nice electronics lab and a small studio I think.

     

    Yeah, I have plans to implement a control system for the nutrient solution. I will get it into the design document before long. I would like to implement some feedback as well, if nothing but pH and an automatic pH up and pH down mechanism. The cultivation side is not my strong point. So I'm not sure what other sensing would be relevant in the nutrient feedforward/feedback loop. It's a bit of a ebb and flow system but not really. The plan is to deliver nutrient solution to the top and let it gravity feed to the bottom, feeding each successive planter. There will be a flow detector in the drain back to the reservoir. If I leave the pump on for some bit of time after the drainage starts that should effectively flood all plants. Then cut it off and wait for the next feeding cycle. I've seen it done successfully online and I wanted to try it. Seems well suited for the vertical and small footprint aspects of the challenge.

     

    I'm going to take a deeper look at the hackaday site. And I'm sure there are other engineering and hacking competitions going on all the time. This may become a thing for me. It's quite fun. And making new contacts with folks who have similar interests is always a good thing. Makes the ideas flow.

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  • DAB
    DAB over 10 years ago

    It has long been a tradition to use farm ponds to raise fish and to harvest fertilizer and fish as part of the overall farm production.

     

    It looks like you have done a great job of automating some of the process.  Now all you need to do is assess the scale you need to support your crop growing efforts.

     

    DAB

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