Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and...

17
Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish Ecology Division NWFSC

Transcript of Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and...

Page 1: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver

Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks

Northwest Fisheries Science CenterFish Ecology Division

NWFSC

Page 2: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Background

• Under an active spill regime, more fish bypass the dams via spillways than through the collection and monitoring facilities

• Based on PIT tag data from adult salmonids returning to Lower Granite Dam, NOAA Fisheries estimates that only 25-35% of the salmonids passing the Snake River dams are currently detected at the collection and monitoring facilities (Faulkner et al. 2013)

Page 3: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Background

• With funding from BPA, NOAA Fisheries contracted Destron Fearing to develop PIT-tag systems for unmodified and modified spillbays

• Destron Fearing provided the first ogee-type transceiver to test in 2011

• Tests compared existing transceivers at the Bonneville Dam corner collector site with the new transceiver

Page 4: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

The corner-collector PIT-tag system is unique in many ways: 1) it has the largest antenna in the basin2) it has only one antenna instead of multiple antennas3) it has a specialized transceiver designed specifically for this site

Page 5: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Background

• Fish tests in 2007, 2009, and 2011 to evaluate new PIT tag models

• 2011 we evaluated the prototype ogee transceiver (FS3001) that could detect normal ISO FDX-B tags that are detected in 32 msec as well as tags that can be read in 16 msec

Page 6: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Background

Telegrams: Full telegram

(128 bits)Half telegram

(64 bits)Header 11 10Message 64 32 Data 38 32 Country/Manuf. 10 0 Reserved 14 0 Animal/no Animal 1 0 Trailer Data 1 0CRC 16 16Trailer 24 0Stuffing 13 6

Total bits: 128 64

Page 7: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Fish tests

Page 8: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

2011 Results

Test Detected Released % Detected

12mm (BCC) 738 947 77.9

12mm (Ogee) 782 975 80.2

9mm (BCC) 27 217 12.4

9mm (Ogee) 64 261 24.5

16msec-12mm (Ogee) 726 835 86.9

Page 9: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Background

• In July 2011, Destron Fearing was bought by Allflex Corporation

• Allflex put Biomark in charge of all the fisheries work – tags, transceivers, and development work

• Due to the changeover and decision to move installation of the spillway detection system to Lower Granite, development was put on hold

Page 10: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Background

• Upgraded transceivers were tested at Bonneville in 2013, but results were not consistent

• Biomark’s engineers went back to the lab and came back in 2014 with significant changes to the ogee transceiver

• PSMFC testing in Kennewick was conducted and live fish tests at Bonneville occurred in May

• Additional testing occurred at Pasco in June

Page 11: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Transceiver modifications

• Biomark modified the layout of the Microprocessor Control Unit (MCU), power supply, receiver, driver, filters, tuning, and terminal board

• The exciter circuit had slight optimizations implemented and the exciter filters were modified and combined into one module

• The CPU module remained mostly unchanged except for the new phase measurement circuitry

• Multiple changes were made to the FS3001 firmware, with the most significant changes made to the tuning algorithm

Page 12: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Fish tests

Page 13: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Test Detected Released % Detected

32msec-12mm (20A) 455 575 79.1

32msec-9mm (20A) 270 398 67.8

32msec-12mm (23A) 826 971 85.1

32msec-9mm (23A) 614 892 68.8

16msec-12mm 280 300 93.3

16msec-9mm 228 300 76.0

2014 Results

Page 14: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

2014 Testing at Pasco

• Field testing continued at Pasco in June

Page 15: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

2014 Results

• Achieved a maximum read range of a 54” with the half-telegram tag and 52” with the standard telegram in the dry

• Submerged testing yielded :– A standard tag was detected effectively while

traveling at approximately 60 fps and 24” above the antenna

– A half-telegram tag was detected effectively while traveling at approximately 60 fps and 36” above the antenna.

Page 16: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Transceiver modifications• implement an exciter module capable of operation at

levels from 24 - 48VDC

• incorporate MCU for measuring antenna current, phase and exciter voltage and performing Auto-tuner control

• modified firmware for the FS3001 that will include the implementation of over-current and over-voltage protection

• designing around 150' cables to allow installation at other locations

Page 17: Evaluation of a Prototype Spillway Transceiver Gordon Axel, Dr. Sandy Downing, Bruce Jonasson, and Gabriel Brooks Northwest Fisheries Science Center Fish.

Summary

• The half telegram tag provides better detectability where EM noise is present or flow velocity is higher

• Transceiver development to be completed in March 2015 with acceptance testing occurring at the end of March

• Further antenna development will begin once the transceiver is completed

• Installation and fish tests at Lower Granite anticipated for 2017 outmigration