essi_ 17 minutes ago

Heard about this several years ago and while it's very cool technology, it's sadly also like putting makeup on a pig. Fish health in those tanks is terrible. The entire idea of farming fish is terrible. The best idea they've come up with so far to avoid sickness is moving those farm tanks onto land so they can be as controlled as possible. I find it to be a bleak industry.

https://www.vetinst.no/nyheter/fiskehelserapporten-2022-inte...

internet_points 2 days ago

Lice are a huge problem. If this solution works, it must not be implemented that widely. The news is full of solutions like physical washing, thermic treatment (basically hot baths), loads of chemicals, also huge amounts of chlorine poured into surrounding rivers because the fish escape the farms and spread lice. The lice are really adaptive. There are more and more lice due to higher sea temperatures[0] and increased resistance to treatments.

[0] https://www-nrk-no.translate.goog/nordland/hoye-temperaturer...

igorkraw 2 days ago

In the beginning of the PhD, to help with rent I contracted to help develop computer vision algorithms in this field, only PoCs, never got very far.

And interesting thing is that the lice apparently evolve super fast, including getting translucent and resistant against poison

  • steve_adams_86 2 days ago

    I’ve noticed that selective pressure on shrimp in an aquarium leads to colour morphs very, very quickly. I bet lice are the same.

    I’ve had tanks where shrimp will match their surroundings quite closely within a year or so. This would be due to some micro predator being present and picking off any babies that are easy to see. Shrimp have babies frequently and the only ones that survive in those conditions are able to blend in really well. Every 2.5 months or so a new generation becomes sexually mature and has dozens of babies every 8 weeks or so.

    It’s a fun hobby because you can actually develop your own morphs in a matter of only years if you want to.

    So it’s not necessarily evolution, but pigments developing (or not) due to environmental pressures.

  • globalise83 2 days ago

    That's interesting! They might also evolve a tendency towards moving to the left flank of the fish.

    • ndr42 2 days ago

      Reminds me of the evolution of fish that prey on scales of other fish to have two distinct types with the mouth on the right or left:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perissodus_microlepis

      Depending on which type is more frequent the other is more successful because the prey is more cautions on the other side...

      edit: spelling

      • globalise83 2 days ago

        My comment was half in gentle jest, but you have really found a relevant example there - thanks for sharing. I guess I have a potential PhD project if I ever want to get into maritime biology: "The Dark Side of the Fish: How Crafty Parasites Outmaneuver High-Tech Pest Control"

    • greggsy 2 days ago

      Fish are known to swim in both directions.

      • amelius 2 days ago

        I guess they swim in the direction of the majority which is probably always the same in a circular tank with many fish.

        • woleium a day ago

          you can move the laser too!

codr7 2 days ago

There are plenty of other problems with keeping fish in concentration camps.

Industrial approaches applied to living beings are just nasty, period.

xeonmc 2 days ago

Can they be mounted on sharks?

jniles 2 days ago

I would love to see more data on this. Their site makes some bold claims, but it is hard to know how to quantify the effectiveness of the laser treatment, How many units do you need per X fish? After how many hours/ days/ weeks does it take to reduce the parasites to X levels?

Not critiquing the technology, just hard to visualize as someone with no knowledge or experience in the field.

whiw 2 days ago

If the laser is powerfull enough to kill sea-lice then how does it avoid blinding the fish or giving them retina burn?

  • thatguy0900 2 days ago

    As long as the fish can still find food that might not matter in a farm environment

    • whiw 2 days ago

      That seems a somewhat callous disregard for the fish, blinded and swimming around with itchy eyes from burned out retina.

      • thatguy0900 2 days ago

        Yeah, it's definitely unethical. I doubt the farmers care though

brian_herman a day ago

I wonder if this feels good for the fish?

James_K 2 days ago

The hyphen makes all the difference here.

Grosvenor 2 days ago

This is exactly the sort of thing I got into tech for. Real world, no bullshit solutions to problems.

I love it.

amelius 2 days ago

It would be more interesting to see what the camera of the system sees.

dddw 2 days ago

Deloused in the Oceaneum

amelius 2 days ago

Is that safe? What if someone falls into the tank?

metalman 2 days ago

oh man dont I just love lasers, just saying laser makes me feel good, more laser and dont I hate parisites and vermin, laser, zap more zap, less horrible blood suckers, and vermin got a small hobby farm....wont use poisons...so I know, probably not going to get rat lazers, but laser powered rat detectors before it gets all kinetic on there dirty rat asses...,snacks for the ravens

nomilk 2 days ago

Title was a little confusing; Stringray is just the name of the laser, which is being used to remove sea lice from salmon. Very cool.

  • dang 2 days ago

    Stingray removed from the title above. Thanks!