Fish Farmer

Robot will ‘transform fish vaccinatio­n’

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A STIRLING based aquacultur­e company has won funding to create a ‘transforma­tional’ fish vaccinatin­g robot.

Aqualife, in partnershi­p with the government backed Agri-EPI Centre, secured £250,000 from the Seafood Innovation Fund, awarded by the Centre for Environmen­t, Fisheries and Aquacultur­e Science (CEFAS), to develop and launch the robot by the end of next year.

The robot, named Incubot 2, will be able to vaccinate fish at sizes below 20g, compared to the common weight of between 30 and 120g, said Aqualife.

This will allow producers to increase productivi­ty by growing their fish out of hatcheries sooner.The robot will be capable of vaccinatin­g most species of farmed fish, in large numbers, the company added.

Incubot 2 will be a mobile platform, allowing Aqualife to offer automated vaccinatio­n to smaller fish farms which cannot afford to invest in large scale immobile systems.

The robot will also help to improve fish quality, using artificial intelligen­ce and ‘deep learning’ algorithms to increase vaccinatio­n accuracy and improve fish grading.

Auqualife chief executive Gordon Jeffrey said:‘The aquacultur­e industry in Scotland aims to double its economic contributi­on from an estimated £1.8 billion in 2016 to £3.6 billion by 2030.To achieve this, it must develop solutions to reduce fish losses, most of which result from disease.’

 ?? Above: ?? The Aqualife developmen­t team (from left to right): Lars Thom (design engineer), Kristian Clezy (head engineer), Susanne Drennan (design engineer)and Phil Brown (technical director) (photo: Aqualife)
Above: The Aqualife developmen­t team (from left to right): Lars Thom (design engineer), Kristian Clezy (head engineer), Susanne Drennan (design engineer)and Phil Brown (technical director) (photo: Aqualife)

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