Big waves at the end of the pier

The large waves and elevated levels of sand and particles in the water have been saturating with the cameras and clogging the image processing pipeline. To keep both cameras running, the SPC2 was reduced to 2 FPS down from 8. An example of just how many particles are in the water is shown below. Note the large number of very small particles in the background, the overall glow behind the mysid, and the blurry spots in front and behind the mysid.

sandy-mysid

Ceratium Bloom

After some strong surf and rough conditions, we had a window to clean the cameras this week in some very poor visibility. With the cameras clean and running well, we are capturing a bloom of ceratium amidst the many, many sand particles suspended by the swell. Below is a view from the SPCP2 showing just how many ceratium are showing up in the camera. These were filtered to a size range of 0.05 mm to 0.15 mm with an aspect ratio of 0.1 to 0.3.

ceratium

Six Month Cleaning and Maintenance

Last week we completed our six month maintenance on the cameras. This included pulling both cameras out of the water, extensive cleaning of the housings and frame, and fixing several issues. In addition, we migrated most of the optical ports to sapphire and added UVC LEDs in a test configuration to study how they might be used to reduce bio-fouling.

Below are a few photos of the cameras after being pulled out of the water and cleaned.

 

New Copper Mesh Installation

You may have noticed recently that the SPC2 camera with the 1-5 mm size preset shows lots of fish fins lately. This is a result of a rather large school of small (0.5 to 5 cm) long fish that have started using the cameras as a shelter. Today we removed the previous copper mesh with a 1.2 cm opening and replaced it with a 0.5 cm opening mesh. This should be smaller than the majority of fish around the cameras and will hopefully limit the number of nuisance images of fish fins. The video below shows the new mesh installed and the plethora of fish surrounding the cameras. In addition we recorded some footage of the amazing visibility today and some other ocean friends.

Server Updates

We had a short downtime today while the software software was updated to the latest version.

Camera Cleaning

We (Eric and Paul) dove on the cameras today to do a much needed cleaning. The SPC2 strobe port was highly fouled again resulting in a bright background in the images. To mitigate this, we added a black shroud around the sun facing side of the SPC2 ports to block direct sunlight from hitting the up looking port. We hypothesize that this was the primary cause of the rapid bio fouling on that port.

Cleaning Dive

Eric and Paul cleaned the cameras today. The SPC2 strobe port was very fouled (see video below) but otherwise the ports were not too bad. We removed lots of growth on the system and verified the pumps are still working.

Copper Mesh Installation

We have recently been seeing lots of images of fish fins in the SPC2 data. It turns out that several juvenile Garibaldi and other small fish have decided that the camera ports make a nice home and perhaps even a good place to catch plankton. To help keep these fish out of the field of view of the cameras, we installed 0.5″ opening copper mesh around each camera on Monday this week. Below is a video showing the result of the installation and several of the fish that were previously swimming around in the field of view.

Camera Cleaning Dive

Yesterday Paul and Eric dove on the cameras for about an hour of cleaning. There was a lot of growth, especially on the south facing side of the SPC2 camera. We recorded before and after videos of the cameras to show how much grow occurs over a 2 month period and how much we were able to remove in one dive.