Legislature(2007 - 2008)BARNES 124

02/13/2008 08:30 AM House FISHERIES


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08:43:21 AM Start
08:43:33 AM Overview: Alaska Department of Fish & Game Camera Sled Research/habitat Assessment/seabed Mapping Program
09:51:56 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Overview of ADF&G camera sled research/ TELECONFERENCED
habitat assessment/seabed mapping program
by Gregg Rosenkranz, Scallop Biometrician
ADF&G
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
              HOUSE SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON FISHERIES                                                                            
                       February 13, 2008                                                                                        
                           8:43 a.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Paul Seaton, Chair                                                                                               
Representative Craig Johnson                                                                                                    
Representative Gabrielle LeDoux                                                                                                 
Representative Peggy Wilson                                                                                                     
Representative Bryce Edgmon                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kyle Johansen                                                                                                    
Representative Lindsey Holmes                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                              
OVERVIEW:  ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF FISH & GAME CAMERA SLED                                                                         
RESEARCH/HABITAT ASSESSMENT/SEABED MAPPING PROGRAM                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
GREGG ROSENKRANZ                                                                                                                
Alaska Department of Fish and Game                                                                                              
Kodiak, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided an overview of the seabed mapping                                                               
program.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PAUL   SEATON  called  the  House   Special  Committee  on                                                             
Fisheries  meeting  to  order at  8:43:21  AM.    Representatives                                                             
Seaton, LeDoux, Johnson,  and Edgmon were present at  the call to                                                               
order.   Representative  Wilson  arrived as  the  meeting was  in                                                               
progress.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
8:43:33 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
^OVERVIEW:    Alaska  Department  of  Fish  &  Game  camera  sled                                                             
research/habitat assessment/seabed mapping program                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:45:01 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SEATON  announced the committee  would hear  a presentation                                                               
by  the  Alaska  Department  of Fish  and  Game  (ADF&G)  scallop                                                               
biometrician,  Gregg Rosenkranz,  on the  camera sled  mapping of                                                               
seafloor habitat  and stock  assessments.   Chair Seaton  said he                                                               
watched the  equipment be  installed on the  vessel in  Homer and                                                               
wanted  the entire  committee to  learn about  this cutting  edge                                                               
technology.    He then  announced  the  committee would  hear  an                                                               
overview  on  mariculture  permitting  on Friday  and  discuss  a                                                               
committee substitute  to HB  257.   As originally  introduced, HB
257 transfers  mariculture permitting from ADF&G  to the Division                                                               
of  Agriculture in  the  Department of  Natural  Resources.   The                                                               
committee substitute  removed the transfer but  allows the Alaska                                                               
Grown  label  to be  applied  to  mariculture products,  a  major                                                               
change from  the original  legislation.  He  told members  to ask                                                               
questions  as  the presentation  is  in  progress and  asked  Mr.                                                               
Rosenkranz to begin.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:46:24 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
GREGG   ROSENKRANZ,   Biometrician,    Division   of   Commercial                                                               
Fisheries,  Alaska  Department of  Fish  &  Game, introduced  two                                                               
people  who have  also worked  on the  seabed sled  project, Rick                                                               
Sheppard,  an  analyst programmer  in  Kodiak,  and Mark  Hoffman                                                               
(ph), a boat officer from Homer.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
8:46:57 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ROSENKRANZ  presented a  slide  show  and told  members  the                                                               
following:                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     I put this  slide up to remind myself to  give a little                                                                    
     bit of a  disclaimer.  That is Kodiak  there ... Kodiak                                                                    
     is a fishing  town and I'm an ex-fisherman so  a lot of                                                                    
     my  perspective on  these things  is  influenced by  my                                                                    
     past experience  as a fisherman  and I'm liable  to say                                                                    
     some things that aren't official  department policy.  I                                                                    
     don't  have anything  to  do  with official  department                                                                    
     policy.   I'm a  researcher so I  just wanted  to throw                                                                    
     that out right from the start.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     I'll  talk  a little  bit  about  the history  of  this                                                                    
     scallop  video project.   I'm  not going  to really  be                                                                    
     talking  a lot  about  the scallop  fishery  but a  few                                                                    
     things will  come in.   I'm going to describe  this new                                                                    
     system  that we  put together  that's based  on a  GigE                                                                    
     Vision camera  and I will  show you with maps  where we                                                                    
     sample and I'll show you  underwater images of what you                                                                    
     see, what we see, and I'll  talk a little bit about the                                                                    
     data analysis  and where we're  trying to go  with this                                                                    
     research.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     This is  the map that shows  Alaska weathervane scallop                                                                    
     fishing  areas and  actually the  red  areas are  where                                                                    
     fishing  has  occurred  since 1993  when  the  observer                                                                    
     program  started.   And  actually,  to  make those  red                                                                    
     polygons visible, I  had to make them  bigger than they                                                                    
     actually are.   The footprint of the  fishery is fairly                                                                    
     small.   It's  confined to  these pretty  compact areas                                                                    
     and then  there's a lot of  black.  There are  a lot of                                                                    
     areas that are  closed to fishing and a lot  of them we                                                                    
     know  that there  are scallops  in and  that's probably                                                                    
     our best conservation measure is  the fact that we have                                                                    
     all of  these closed areas.  ... For example,  out here                                                                    
     we know there  are quite a few scallops in  and we know                                                                    
     there are scallops down here.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     I  don't  know how  familiar  you  folks are  with  the                                                                    
     history of  this but a  lot of these areas  were closed                                                                    
     to protect  tanner crab habitat  and that's  really the                                                                    
     main reason that you see the closed waters there.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Why  imaging for  scallop stock  assessment?   Well, on                                                                    
     the left  there you  see a  sampling dredge  that ADF&G                                                                    
     deploys off of one of their  own vessels.  It's kind of                                                                    
     a  smaller model  of  what is  used  in the  commercial                                                                    
     fishery with  a liner  inside of it  so you  retain the                                                                    
     smaller  scallops but  these things  are very  finicky.                                                                    
     Sometimes you  catch what's there.   Sometimes you only                                                                    
     catch one-half of  it.  Sometimes you  might only catch                                                                    
     one out of ten scallops  and it's just about impossible                                                                    
     to estimate  that efficiency.   The  sled is  also non-                                                                    
     intrusive,  which is  nice in  case, say,  you want  to                                                                    
     sample  in  some closed  areas.    It provides  habitat                                                                    
     information ... underwater images  do.  The dredge does                                                                    
     in a way but it integrates  it.  Basically you bring up                                                                    
     the  habitat  and dump  it  in  a  pile on  deck,  sort                                                                    
     through it, and then throw it  back over.  And then the                                                                    
     bottom  one, cost  effective, that's  always a  concern                                                                    
     for Fish and  Game so there is no way  that I'd be here                                                                    
     talking about this  if what we were doing  was not cost                                                                    
     effective.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:50:10 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     And this is one reason  why this technology can be cost                                                                    
     effective is because  you don't need as  many people at                                                                    
     sea.   This  is  a bunch  of  ADF&G biologists  sorting                                                                    
     through a  dredge catch near  Kayak Island  where there                                                                    
     is some  pretty heavy scallop  fishing but it's  a very                                                                    
     labor intensive way to sample.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Factors affecting catch per unit  effort - this is sort                                                                    
     of  my laundry  list of  reasons why  I think  that the                                                                    
     dredge sampling  is not a  particularly good way  to go                                                                    
     and also  what makes  it difficult to  manage fisheries                                                                    
     with just  catch per  unit effort data,  which we  do a                                                                    
     lot of in  Fish and Game.  If there's  no survey there,                                                                    
     you'd have fishery data like  catch per unit effort and                                                                    
     that's what  we manage a lot  of stuff on.   But, there                                                                    
     [are] all of these little  things that could affect the                                                                    
     measure of CPUE  like the captain, the  vessel, the sea                                                                    
     state, the  electronics, etcetera and the  list goes on                                                                    
     and on and there's a  similar list for trawl surveys as                                                                    
     well.  I  mean I don't think a trawl  is a particularly                                                                    
     effective  sampling  device  either.    So,  for  those                                                                    
     reasons, we  started working  on doing  some underwater                                                                    
     imaging as  a possible  replacement for  dredge surveys                                                                    
     back  in 2000  and  the  first thing  we  had was  this                                                                    
     little drop camera.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     And there's just a little  camera pointed straight down                                                                    
     right  there  and  there's a  recording  device  inside                                                                    
     there and  some batteries and we're  taking pictures of                                                                    
     the bottom.   Well,  you can't  cover very  much ground                                                                    
     with a drop device like that  and so it wasn't too long                                                                    
     before  we thought  well, we  need to  drag this  thing                                                                    
     along the bottom so this is  what we had in 2001.  And,                                                                    
     again,  there's   the  little  underwater   camera  and                                                                    
     there's just  batteries and a camcorder  where the data                                                                    
     is recorded and a couple  of lights pointing down.  Oh,                                                                    
     and that  was when we  had the camera  pointed forward.                                                                    
     We were  worried about were  the scallops  swimming out                                                                    
     of the way.  Scallops can  swim and we noticed that was                                                                    
     a  very rare  occurrence  so we  changed  to point  the                                                                    
     camera straight down.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     So we kept modifying the  sled and towing it around and                                                                    
     we did  a lot of  surveys with it  and we got  a bigger                                                                    
     battery, more  lights, we had a  little fancier housing                                                                    
     with  the camcorder  in here  but still,  you're really                                                                    
     limited by  that battery and you're  recording the data                                                                    
     on tape  so you have to  haul this thing back  every 15                                                                    
     minutes, which takes a lot of  time.  And, in fact, you                                                                    
     spend  most of  your time  hauling it  up, getting  the                                                                    
     camera out of there, making  sure you got data, putting                                                                    
     it  back down,  etcetera.   And also  there are  really                                                                    
     some safety issues too.   We were setting this over the                                                                    
     side on a fairly small boat  and you can see how banged                                                                    
     up that  thing is there.   We'd  be doing this  like 50                                                                    
     miles offshore  in the Bering  Sea.   So I finally  - I                                                                    
     kind of got tired of it.   It wasn't very efficient and                                                                    
     it was  dangerous and I  was like well, we're  going to                                                                    
     keep doing this.  Someone's  going to get hurt.  That's                                                                    
     not going to  be good.  So,  I had to kind  of sell the                                                                    
     people around the  state on the fact that  we needed to                                                                    
     upgrade.  We  needed to do something  different and the                                                                    
     way that  we financed it was  simply by not going  on a                                                                    
     survey for one year.  I  should note that the funds for                                                                    
     this  particular project  have  always  come from  CFEC                                                                    
     [Commercial Fisheries Entry  Commission] since day one.                                                                    
     It's not  a large budget  but that's the money  we used                                                                    
     so we  took the money we  would have used to  go to sea                                                                    
     one  year  and saved  it  up  and  decided to  do  this                                                                    
     upgrade.    That  was  about   the  time  I  met  Scott                                                                    
     Gallagher.  The  one semi-smart thing that  I did while                                                                    
     we were towing  that other sled around was  I did write                                                                    
     a paper  on that  and got it  published in  a fisheries                                                                    
     journal so  people sort  of knew  who I  was and  I was                                                                    
     able to go to this  meeting in Seattle about underwater                                                                    
     video stuff and  Scott Gallagher was one  of the people                                                                    
     there  talking about  his HabCam  system.   I  realized                                                                    
     pretty quickly  that this  technology addressed  all of                                                                    
     the concerns that I had  about what we were doing: one,                                                                    
     it had live  feed to the surface so you  could see what                                                                    
     was going  on down  there; two, much  higher resolution                                                                    
     than  putting a  camcorder  in a  pressure housing  and                                                                    
     pointing that at the bottom;  and three, the lighting -                                                                    
     using strobe  lights.   I just was  like oh,  wow, that                                                                    
     really makes a lot of sense Scott, you're a great guy.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     So we went  and visited them in November of  2005 and I                                                                    
     should  note the  HabCam is  actually  a joint  project                                                                    
     with  Woods Hole  and the  fishing community  and these                                                                    
     guys  are actually  ex-fishermen that  are also  really                                                                    
     smart guys and  they approached Scott and  said hey, we                                                                    
     need to  do something  better here than  what's getting                                                                    
     down as  far as scallop  research on George's  Bank and                                                                    
     that's how the project got started - their project.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     And I  really think  I was  delusional looking  back on                                                                    
     it.   But  we  actually  had the  basic  pieces of  the                                                                    
     system ... mounted  on the old sled,  which wasn't very                                                                    
     optimal  but we  had that  going that  next June  and I                                                                    
     don't see how  we ever did that looking back  on it but                                                                    
     we did.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     So, what are  the parts of the system?   I should first                                                                    
     explain  that  GigE  Vision  is  a  standard  from  the                                                                    
     Automated  Imaging  Association,  which  is  a  machine                                                                    
     vision industry  trade group.  Scott  Gallagher was the                                                                    
     one who  was smart enough to  see that in a  way towing                                                                    
     something along  the bottom and emptying  the bottom is                                                                    
     a lot  like machine vision  where you basically  have a                                                                    
     camera  pointed  at a  conveyor  belt  - is  often  the                                                                    
     scenario in  machine vision  - where  you're inspecting                                                                    
     something.   So he was  able to see the  connection and                                                                    
     start   using  technology   from  the   machine  vision                                                                    
     community  in fisheries  research.   So  we had  design                                                                    
     assistance  from the  HabCam project.   They  basically                                                                    
     just showed  us here's the  stuff we use.   They didn't                                                                    
     say here's  how you ought to  do it or anything.   They                                                                    
     said here's how we do it.  You could try this.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:56:26 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Of  course we  were  looking for  a  low cost  approach                                                                    
     because we  didn't have a  lot of  money.  And  it also                                                                    
     needed  to be  pretty  simple because  we're not  Woods                                                                    
     Hole.    We don't  have  the  technical expertise  that                                                                    
     those  people  have there.    So  really, kind  of  the                                                                    
     subtitle of this whole talk  could be taking Woods Hole                                                                    
     to the -  can Woods Hole technology be used  by a state                                                                    
     agency?  It seems like the answer to that is yes.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     So the  system components  are this GigE  Vision camera                                                                    
     I'll  show you,  strobe  lighting -  and that's  really                                                                    
     important because when you're  towing this thing across                                                                    
     the bottom what you really want  to do with the data is                                                                    
     look at a still image.   People will show you some nice                                                                    
     video and  you'll see  a fish  swimming along  but when                                                                    
     they  stop that  video playback,  the still  image will                                                                    
     always  be  a little  blurred  and  the reason  why  is                                                                    
     because  you traveled  a  certain  distance across  the                                                                    
     bottom while the shutter was  imaging so there's always                                                                    
     motion  artifacts.   Well  [with]  the strobe  lighting                                                                    
     you've  got  about 20  milliseconds  of  light and  you                                                                    
     don't  travel very  far during  20 milliseconds  and so                                                                    
     you get  a much,  much sharper  image than  you'll ever                                                                    
     get with video with analog lighting.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     The other  really nice  thing about  this system  is it                                                                    
     uses commercial off-the-shelf  Ethernet hardware.  It's                                                                    
     the same type of stuff they  use to wire up the Capitol                                                                    
     Building   probably,   so   you   all   have   Internet                                                                    
     connectivity at your  desks.  These are,  you know, you                                                                    
     can go to  10 different suppliers and buy a  lot of the                                                                    
     pieces that we use.   There is also armored fiber optic                                                                    
     tow  cable, which  isn't widely  available, one  of the                                                                    
     more spendier parts  of it, wench with a  slip ring and                                                                    
     fiber optic rotary joint and  I'll show you pictures of                                                                    
     this.  This  oil filled junction box  and computers and                                                                    
     data  storage are  on just  regular computers  and hard                                                                    
     drives.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:58:21 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     And I  do have to  acknowledge the people  that helped,                                                                    
     Mark Hoffman  of the Pandalus  and Rick Sheppard.   And                                                                    
     that  was on  our recent  trip just  a couple  of weeks                                                                    
     ago, we were  in Woods Hole and you can  see them there                                                                    
     checking out  the (indisc.).   It was really nice.   We                                                                    
     were very warmly  received there.  They  thought it was                                                                    
     great  that  we  were  using  technology  that  they've                                                                    
     developed  there  and,   surprisingly,  not  that  many                                                                    
     people  are  trying to  do  it.    And then  the  third                                                                    
     person, Mark Blakely, we did  hire a consultant to help                                                                    
     us with  the first  - he actually  was on  contract the                                                                    
     first couple of  years and he's a local  Kodiak guy who                                                                    
     has  his own  [remotely  operated vehicle]  ROV and  he                                                                    
     helped us build some of the components of our system.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     So this thing is basically  a computer network.  That's                                                                    
     really the  beauty of it  and on  the top side  and the                                                                    
     tow vessel  you have  a few  computers and  an Ethernet                                                                    
     switch, which is a very common Ethernet device.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Then you have the two cables  and on the sled there's a                                                                    
     bottle  that  has  another Ethernet  switch  in  it,  a                                                                    
     serial  device server,  and  then  the camera  connects                                                                    
     directly to that switch.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     I don't  want to go  into a lot  of detail on  that but                                                                    
     the single mode  fiber is - it's kind  of mind boggling                                                                    
     because I  had to  learn how  to terminate  this stuff.                                                                    
     When you get  down to the business end of  it, it's - I                                                                    
     don't  want to  misstate the  - I  cannot think  of the                                                                    
     measurement.  It's about one-tenth  the size of a human                                                                    
     hair is  the fiber  diameter.   And really,  with fiber                                                                    
     you  have  -  I   won't  say  unlimited  bandwidth  but                                                                    
     compared  to  what  you  could  do  over  copper,  over                                                                    
     coaxial   or   twisted   pair,   the   old   style   of                                                                    
     "telemetrying" data  from an underwater vehicle  to the                                                                    
     surface, there's just no comparison.   That was the big                                                                    
     choice, are we  going to jump ahead or are  we going to                                                                    
     be satisfied  with 30-year old technology  and, I guess                                                                    
     at that  point in my  life I  guess I wasn't  afraid of                                                                    
     failure.   I  was  like  well, let's  try  it.   If  it                                                                    
     doesn't work,  what do  we have  to lose?   So  we went                                                                    
     ahead  and   tried  the  new  technology   rather  than                                                                    
     investing money in something that is 30 years old.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:00:27 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     There  was  also  good  timing  with  this.    This  is                                                                    
     actually  serial number  blah, blah,  blah zero  one of                                                                    
     this model  of camera.   The  standard was  just coming                                                                    
     out when  we were starting  to put the  system together                                                                    
     but  the main  feature  of this  camera  is that  right                                                                    
     there.   It's a  regular RJ 45  plug and  this attaches                                                                    
     directly to a  computer network.  This  camera will run                                                                    
     up to 15 frames  a second.  We run at  about four - you                                                                    
     don't really  need to know  about the sensor size.   We                                                                    
     just have it mounted in  a little pressure housing with                                                                    
     a dome  fork pointed  straight down  and this  is parts                                                                    
     and pieces  we had from the  old system.  And  then the                                                                    
     strobe lights - it's a  machine vision strobe.  We just                                                                    
     put it  in an underwater  housing that's made out  of a                                                                    
     piece  of aluminum  pipe.   The  telemetry bottle  that                                                                    
     fits on  the sled has  this Ethernet  switch in it.   I                                                                    
     mean this  is very simple.   That's a power  supply, an                                                                    
     Ethernet switch,  and a serial  device server.   That's                                                                    
     really  all  that's in  the  bottle  and this  is  that                                                                    
     Ethernet  switch and  the one  difference between  this                                                                    
     and  what  you probably  have  a  bunch of  around  the                                                                    
     building  here is  this.   It's  a  little fiber  optic                                                                    
     media converter.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     Now  there are  standards  to  send Ethernet,  Internet                                                                    
     over  fiber  optic.   So,  once  again, it's  not  that                                                                    
     expensive.   There's one  like this,  it's also  on the                                                                    
     topside, one  in the  bottle.  It's  a pair  that talks                                                                    
     back  and forth  to each  other and  I think  it's like                                                                    
     $1,000  or  something.     It's  not  hugely  expensive                                                                    
     whereas if you  want to buy a ROV or  have some company                                                                    
     build you a system to  telemeter data from a vehicle to                                                                    
     the surface, it will cost you a lot more than that.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     We had  to get a wench  and we had this  wench built in                                                                    
     Kodiak and  it's taken  us three  years, really.   This                                                                    
     being  the  third  year, we  finally  have  this  thing                                                                    
     working really pretty  well now.  We  had some problems                                                                    
     with it but we got it  for dirt cheap by having a local                                                                    
     company build it.  If we  couldn't have got it for that                                                                    
     price, we  wouldn't have been  able to do  the project.                                                                    
     But the  one piece of  hardware in it  that's essential                                                                    
     is this slip  ring and it fits right in  the hub of the                                                                    
     wench  and it  allows electrical  and fiber  signals to                                                                    
     pass around.   Basically there's  a fiber -  there's an                                                                    
     interface  there  where  two  ends  of  fiber,  one  is                                                                    
     stationary and the other is  spinning against it and it                                                                    
     transmits the  data across  there so  that's kind  of a                                                                    
     specialized piece.  They're about $6,000.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     The junction box  - you don't need to know  a lot about                                                                    
     that but that  fits on the end of  the telemetry bottle                                                                    
     and  that's  where  the  actual  fiber  and  electrical                                                                    
     terminations  occur   on  the   sled  end   and  that's                                                                    
     something  if you  - you  know, when  we were  at Woods                                                                    
     Hole,  everything  they  have,  they  have  oil  filled                                                                    
     junction boxes  on everything.  It's  something they've                                                                    
     used a lot and it works well.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     And then  on the  topside, we have  computers.   I mean                                                                    
     I've literally  pulled the computer  out from  under my                                                                    
     desk and  taken it to  sea for the  last few years.   I                                                                    
     think  I might  get  some dedicated  computers now  and                                                                    
     then  the storage,  this box,  hot swappable  array, is                                                                    
     not an  expensive component.   What  fits in  there are                                                                    
     regular hard drives like you  have in your computer and                                                                    
     we  just fill  up  a lot  of them  so,  you know,  it's                                                                    
     cheap.  It  is $75 for a 300 gigabyte  hard drive these                                                                    
     days so that's not a huge expense.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     And,  of   course,  we  have  our   favorite  low  cost                                                                    
     oceanographic platform  and that's  the Pandalus.   And                                                                    
     again, if it wasn't for  the Pandalus, we wouldn't have                                                                    
     done any of this.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:04:11 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Mark Hoffman  basically took it  on himself to  cut the                                                                    
     bulwarks off the  stern, get this U-frame  built by Bay                                                                    
     Welding -  they're in Homer.   We  used a lot  of Homer                                                                    
     and Kodiak  vendors to  build most of  this stuff.   So                                                                    
     inside -  this is actually  a borrowed shack  that they                                                                    
     use for their  ROV that they have there but  we put our                                                                    
     computers and  what-not in  there and  you can  see the                                                                    
     sled in there.   So, it's kind of  an undersized vessel                                                                    
     but we've taken this all  the way from Cape Fairweather                                                                    
     up to  the Bering Sea sampling  so we have quite  a bit                                                                    
     of confidence  in the boat.   I have  utmost confidence                                                                    
     in  Mark Hoffman's  skill  as a  boat  operator.   It's                                                                    
     cheap compared to going out on  a larger boat or a real                                                                    
     oceanographic vessel.   This  doesn't really  cost very                                                                    
     much.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Then we  use a four person  crew.  We maybe  could take                                                                    
     five but  you don't  need to have  that large  group of                                                                    
     people to sort  through a catch on  deck because you're                                                                    
     not really  getting a catch on  deck.  So, this  is the                                                                    
     new sled.   We just  got this  built by Bay  Welding in                                                                    
     Homer this last  spring and used it for  the first time                                                                    
     last summer and that's right  off of Cape Douglas there                                                                    
     at the end of Shelikof Straits.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     So what does  this thing do?  Well, it  takes four - it                                                                    
     streams four  1360 by 1024 mega  pixel basically images                                                                    
     and writes  them on a  hard drive  on the boat  in real                                                                    
     time.  So the data adds up  in a hurry.  You get 14,400                                                                    
     images an hour  or 56 gigabytes an hour so  you fill up                                                                    
     one of  these hard  drives in a  matter of  five hours.                                                                    
     The  other  really nice  thing  about  it is  with  the                                                                    
     strobe lighting,  you can  tow faster.   I see  now the                                                                    
     HabCam guys are going to try  and go with five frames a                                                                    
     second and tow at five knots  and that might be what we                                                                    
     want to shoot for.  But,  in the meantime, when we were                                                                    
     using our  old system we were  trying to tow at  a knot                                                                    
     and a half, which is  almost impossible to drive a boat                                                                    
     that  slowly, plus  you don't  cover that  much ground.                                                                    
     But  going  at four  knots  you  can actually  cover  a                                                                    
     pretty  good area  during  a day,  one  kind of  Alaska                                                                    
     invention the  Woods Hole guys  got a big kick  out of.                                                                    
     That's our safety release there.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     There's  a  hundred fathoms  of  quarter  inch line  in                                                                    
     there -  that really strong  synthetic line and  a hard                                                                    
     float with a  galvanic release so if we  ever did break                                                                    
     our cable, about  24 hours later that  hard float would                                                                    
     pop up hopefully to the  surface and we'd have a chance                                                                    
     to  recover the  whole sled.   And  then the  one other                                                                    
     kind  of interesting  part, this  green  cable you  see                                                                    
     right  there is  what actually  connects the  camera to                                                                    
     the telemetry bottle and we  were the first ones to use                                                                    
     that  and  even the  Woods  Hole  people were  actually                                                                    
     really  impressed with  the way  that we  did that  and                                                                    
     they  are using  the exact  same  thing on  a bunch  of                                                                    
     stuff now.   The  other thing  is our  vehicle actually                                                                    
     rides  on the  bottom.   The  HabCam is  towed off  the                                                                    
     bottom,  which has  some advantages  and also  has some                                                                    
     problems  with it  but we  have these  replaceable wear                                                                    
     strips  on here.   It's  a material  called Treks  that                                                                    
     they  use like  on crab  boat deck  boards.   It's part                                                                    
     plastic, part wood.  And so  on harder bottom, a lot of                                                                    
     the bottoms  we go  on are pretty  soft, but  on harder                                                                    
     bottom sand and  stuff it wears it off and  you can see                                                                    
     how it wore down in the back.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:07:39 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Well  we have  a  lot of  weight in  the  back of  this                                                                    
     because it overhangs  in the front.  The  basic idea of                                                                    
     this,  besides  having  a clear  imaging  area  in  the                                                                    
     front,  is we  wanted something  that would  go over  a                                                                    
     crab pot  because there are  lost crab  pots everywhere                                                                    
     you  go in  Alaska and  if you  get hung  up on  those,                                                                    
     you're going to lose your sled  in a hurry.  This thing                                                                    
     is actually built to go up  over it and we've been able                                                                    
     to go over a lot of  stuff because all of the weight is                                                                    
     in the  back so the  front is kind  of light.   When we                                                                    
     hit  rocks and  stuff, we  just kind  of go  over them.                                                                    
     I've been  really happy with  the way that  worked out.                                                                    
     So the first  year that we had this in  2006 on the old                                                                    
     sled we spent a long time  at the dock in Homer getting                                                                    
     this all  to work but  we finally did, steamed  over to                                                                    
     Yakutat, put  it in  the water,  and were  just amazed.                                                                    
     It just worked.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     It just kept working.   The images weren't the greatest                                                                    
     but as far  as being able to get the  data, the network                                                                    
     was good.  The data storage  worked.  I was just really                                                                    
     happy  with the  results of  it.   As long  as we  were                                                                    
     looking at a map I did  want to just touch on something                                                                    
     that is of  interest to this committee,  I believe, and                                                                    
     that  is  the  difference  between  state  and  federal                                                                    
     waters in relationship to where scallops get fished.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Now  you may  not know,  but that  is the  border right                                                                    
     there  between Central  Region and  Southeast so  these                                                                    
     are managed by Central  Region while these Yakutat beds                                                                    
     are managed  out of  the Douglas  office.   That state-                                                                    
     federal water  line, it runs right  through these beds.                                                                    
     I mean  Kayak Island;  people are  talking a  lot about                                                                    
     how Kayak  Island might be  a good state  water fishery                                                                    
     but really not that much  of where it's fished.  Again,                                                                    
     there are scallops  outside of these red  lines.  These                                                                    
     red  lines  enclose  about 98  percent  of  effort  and                                                                    
     harvest  since the  observer program  started in  1993.                                                                    
     So  I just  wanted you  to get  a little  idea of  what                                                                    
     you're talking about.  I  mean there is one little area                                                                    
     there and one there.   These beds are really outside of                                                                    
     state waters.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     I'm guessing you folks know  your Alaska coast a little                                                                    
     bit at  least.  Yakutat Bay  is right there so  this is                                                                    
     from  Yakutat up  to Cape  St. Elias  and then  between                                                                    
     Yakutat  down  to  Fairweather  and,  of  course,  Cape                                                                    
     Spencer is right down here,  same thing.  While there's                                                                    
     more - this bed is  actually inside state waters.  Some                                                                    
     of this one,  a little of this and then  that one is in                                                                    
     state waters.   So, it's really  - it's hard for  me to                                                                    
     think about  trying to have  a different  fishery going                                                                    
     on  depending on  which  side of  that  line you're  on                                                                    
     because  they're  a  contiguous  biological  population                                                                    
     and, just  to hammer that  point home, this is  an area                                                                    
     boundary between Area D and  District 16.  That was put                                                                    
     there  for  salmon or  some  other  fishery because  it                                                                    
     basically bisects  a contiguous bed that  we know about                                                                    
     and it causes all sorts  of problems, believe me.  That                                                                    
     line  is actually  defined  ambiguously in  regulation.                                                                    
     So, depending on where you  read, that line is actually                                                                    
     going to  move a little  bit around and it's  enough to                                                                    
     confuse the fishermen.   So that's Mount  St. Elias and                                                                    
     actually the beach  they surf on is  right there, right                                                                    
     outside of Yakutat, just so you can see.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     So we got  this thing in the water and  what do we see?                                                                    
     Well  ...  scallops  live  on a  lot  of  really  muddy                                                                    
     bottoms  in   Alaska  and   suspended  sediment   is  a                                                                    
     problem....This is actually a  very unusual picture and                                                                    
     there's  actually  a  smaller  scallop  there  too  but                                                                    
     there's  four  scallops in  one  frame.   Usually,  the                                                                    
     usual count is zero.   Anyway, but that's what we could                                                                    
     see and  then, of course,  we found out that  the water                                                                    
     isn't always silty.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     This is  the kind  of resolution  we were  getting with                                                                    
     the  old  sled  and  it  had  some  very  bad  lighting                                                                    
     problems.  There wasn't physically  room on the sled to                                                                    
     get four lights  over our field of view.   So, the data                                                                    
     was still  actually pretty good  for manual  review but                                                                    
     obviously  there was  a lot  of  room for  improvement.                                                                    
     Just to  show you some of  the other stuff we  saw from                                                                    
     that survey, that's  some skate egg cases on  kind of a                                                                    
     sandier bottom  with shell ash.   That is an eel  and I                                                                    
     don't  know  if  you  can  see it  there  but  you  can                                                                    
     actually see the  little fin marks.  I  mean that's the                                                                    
     resolution that you  get.  There are  1360 pixels going                                                                    
     across this way and it's just  over a meter in width so                                                                    
     you  have  more than  a  pixel  per millimeter  on  the                                                                    
     bottom.    So  you   can  really  actually  talk  about                                                                    
     millimeter resolution  on the  bottom or being  able to                                                                    
     identify things  that are 10  to 20 millimeters  and on                                                                    
     up, depending on the water clarity of course.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     So that  was the first year.   Then we got  out and got                                                                    
     the  better sled  built and  then this  last spring  we                                                                    
     headed over  to Shelikof  Strait.   What you  see here,                                                                    
     again,  this  is  a  polygon  that  encloses  about  98                                                                    
     percent  of  the  effort  since  our  observer  program                                                                    
     started in  1993.  The blue  lines are the tow  pass of                                                                    
     one vessel during one season.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:13:14 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     What  I've shown  here is  the 100  meter or  50 fathom                                                                    
     curve and,  in a  lot of areas  of the  state, scallops                                                                    
     seem to be  concentrated around that depth  and you can                                                                    
     see how the effort really follows that as well.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Well, let's  go ahead  and look  at some  boundaries on                                                                    
     that  picture.   So  you had  the state-federal  water,                                                                    
     there's  another island,  a little  rock  off of  here,                                                                    
     with  scallops around  there but  this is  the federal-                                                                    
     state water  line in Shelikof Straits  so, obviously, a                                                                    
     state  water fishery  here would  be very  difficult to                                                                    
     enforce.   Most  of  the scallops  I  think, well,  the                                                                    
     majority of  the scallops are  probably in  the federal                                                                    
     water outside.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Now this is also a  statistical area lying here and the                                                                    
     way the  fisheries managers - actually  separate quotas                                                                    
     for the  north part of  the bed  and the south  part of                                                                    
     the bed, so  it gets pretty confusing  pretty fast when                                                                    
     you take these non-natural  boundaries and start trying                                                                    
     to manage fisheries with them.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Well,  so we  went over  there and  last June,  I guess                                                                    
     that was,  we spent  five days, not  full days,  at sea                                                                    
     and  that's what  we  were able  to  cover doing  these                                                                    
     kinds  of zigzag  transects over  the bed,  82 nautical                                                                    
     miles towed and a few hundred thousand images.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:14:39 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Really, the  main thing  we've learned  so far  is that                                                                    
     the  system  is  really  pretty  dependable  and  works                                                                    
     pretty dang well.  A  view of Shelikof Straits and, so,                                                                    
     this is  what the bottom  looks like over there.   Once                                                                    
     again,  there  are  scallops  on  this  really,  really                                                                    
     sedimentary bottom and you can  see right there - maybe                                                                    
     you can't - there's a  little portion of the shell that                                                                    
     doesn't have  sediment on  it and you  kind of  see the                                                                    
     natural color  of the scallops.   I was really  kind of                                                                    
     amazed to  realize that these  animals live  and thrive                                                                    
     in  such a  silty environment.    I mean  you have  the                                                                    
     [indisc.] Bay,  huge glacial  outflow right  there, but                                                                    
     these  animals live  there.    It's surprising  because                                                                    
     they are  filter feeders and  you would think  it would                                                                    
     be inefficient for them to  filter all of this sediment                                                                    
     to get some food but that's where they live.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Just to  give you an idea,  ... we do see  other stuff.                                                                    
     This is just  a little bit shallower water  on the side                                                                    
     of the  bed on the harder  bottom and we do  see colors                                                                    
     down there.  A lot of what  we see is kind of the color                                                                    
     of silt.   You can  see around the outside  we're still                                                                    
     working on  our optics.   We have  that dome  port lens                                                                    
     that  we  shoot  the  camera   through  and  it's  very                                                                    
     difficult to get  the whole edges of the  field of view                                                                    
     into  focus with  the  amount  of light  we  have.   So                                                                    
     that's  something we're  working on.   Hopefully  we'll                                                                    
     have it solved by this upcoming season.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     And  then  I mentioned  that  this  is a  non-intrusive                                                                    
     sampling.   Well that's  not quite true.   In  a really                                                                    
     soft bottom,  that sled weighs  about 1,000  pounds and                                                                    
     it will  penetrate a  few inches into  the bottom.   So                                                                    
     that's a  sled track that  we then cross back  over and                                                                    
     got  a  picture  of.    And  these  dots  here  are  10                                                                    
     centimeters apart  to give you  an idea of the  size of                                                                    
     stuff in the field of view.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Arrowtooth  flounder is  something that  we just  see a                                                                    
     lot of  down there  and an  occasional cod,  although I                                                                    
     think most of  the cod are scared away by  the sled and                                                                    
     we  don't see  a  lot  of them.    After  we worked  in                                                                    
     Shelikof  we  went  around over  to  Augustine  Island,                                                                    
     Kamishak Bay and we're working  on a comparative survey                                                                    
     there where -  they also did a dredge  survey and we're                                                                    
     going to be  able to compare the  estimates between the                                                                    
     two methods.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:17:10 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Just to  show you the stuff  on the sled, there  is the                                                                    
     tube with  the camera  pointing straight down.   That's                                                                    
     sonar that looks ahead.   Hopefully if we were going to                                                                    
     run into  a sunken  crabber we would  see that.   There                                                                    
     are four  strobe lights arranged  around the  sides and                                                                    
     then  the telemetry  bottle is  right  back there  and,                                                                    
     really, that's about all there is to it.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     So we  got on  to some harder  bottoms over  there and,                                                                    
     low and behold, there are  a bunch of scallops on these                                                                    
     harder bottoms.  I believe  these are clams.  There has                                                                    
     been  some dispute  about that  and it's  one of  those                                                                    
     things that yes,  you do sometimes need  to get samples                                                                    
     in your  hand to actually look  at and ID but  it gives                                                                    
     you an  idea.  These  scallops are probably,  you know,                                                                    
     20  millimeter  shell  height so  they're  pretty  dang                                                                    
     small and  we can see them  quite well if the  water is                                                                    
     clear enough.   These  six-arm sea stars  seem to  be a                                                                    
     pretty big  predator of the  scallops over  in Kamishak                                                                    
     Bay.   Just  some  of the  other [indisc.]  vertebrates                                                                    
     that you see there -  there are sea pan (ph), different                                                                    
     kinds of sea stars, and one  of the animals that we see                                                                    
     quite a  bit of that people  wish there was a  lot more                                                                    
     are tanner  crabs.  Well it  turns out I'm an  old crab                                                                    
     researcher from my days in  graduate school so I'm very                                                                    
     interested in  tanner crabs as  well.  We  assess these                                                                    
     with trawl  nets, which doesn't work  particularly well                                                                    
     because a  lot of them like  to get buried down  in the                                                                    
     mud so it's  hard to catch them with the  trawl.  We do                                                                    
     that and  I think  we're not sure  - well  for example,                                                                    
     I'll show  you on a  map, but  we could image  the same                                                                    
     crabs twice  quite easily  on a  survey [with]  the way                                                                    
     that we use the camera sled.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     But, I  think there's the potential  there working with                                                                    
     different  sampling methods  to just  try and  find the                                                                    
     spatial extent  of these animals.   I think  that's the                                                                    
     direction we're probably  going to want to  go over the                                                                    
     long  term  rather  than   having  point  estimates  of                                                                    
     abundance,  looking  at things  in  more  of a  spatial                                                                    
     context  - ecosystem  approaches  to management,  which                                                                    
     I'll talk a little bit more about.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     This is another  thing that you see this and  it just -                                                                    
     because I  have to tell  you, I have been  about really                                                                    
     the only one  that's looked at a lot of  this data just                                                                    
     because there  isn't anyone  else to do  it.   That's a                                                                    
     little juvenile  tanner crab with  some, we  call these                                                                    
     emergent epifauna.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     So you  get on these harder  bottoms and you see  a lot                                                                    
     of stuff  and it looks  to a  lot of people  like these                                                                    
     types of things might  be extremely important for young                                                                    
     animals of  different species:   crabs, cod,  what have                                                                    
     you.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     So, I guess  just from my own experience  of looking at                                                                    
     this data,  I'm realizing hey,  we need to look  at the                                                                    
     whole picture.   We did  this because  we're interested                                                                    
     in  scallop stock  assessment but  it looks  like we've                                                                    
     got to  think about other things  besides scallops when                                                                    
     we use the data.  And  there are still a few king crabs                                                                    
     over in Kamishak  Bay, not very many of  them but there                                                                    
     are a  few and  we got  a couple  of pictures  of them.                                                                    
     Another kind of  interesting thing, there are  a lot of                                                                    
     flat fish over there and who  knew.  There are only two                                                                    
     in  this one.   There  were some  frames that  had like                                                                    
     five flat fish just lying right  next to each other.  I                                                                    
     didn't know  they were  that family  oriented.   Like I                                                                    
     said, we managed  to go over stuff  maybe we shouldn't.                                                                    
     This is a  big rock we bounced over.   An octopus lived                                                                    
     right  under there  obviously.   Octopus, they  just go                                                                    
     out  into the  scallop beds  and find  their lunch  and                                                                    
     then they bring it home, I  guess, is the way that they                                                                    
     do it but that's definitely an octopus midden.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     So I  mentioned that I spent  a lot of time  looking at                                                                    
     this data  because we're doing this  comparative survey                                                                    
     so  what we  did  there  was -  there  are 88.1  square                                                                    
     nautical mile stations and we  just went up one row and                                                                    
     down the other.  Well that  took two days so, you know,                                                                    
     like  crabs that  are pretty  mobile, if  you saw  them                                                                    
     here  on one  day they  could  be over  here the  next.                                                                    
     That's  why I  say  you could  image  the same  animals                                                                    
     twice, a potential problem.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:21:40 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     But this  just shows the  abundance of scallops.   This                                                                    
     is just kind of an example  of a data product you could                                                                    
     get out  of this.   What I did  was looked at  the data                                                                    
     and then every two-minute clip  I would stop and record                                                                    
     the count.  I didn't  have frame accurate review, which                                                                    
     is what  you should  have.   You should  basically know                                                                    
     where  exactly  each scallop  was  counted  but I  just                                                                    
     didn't have the time or software  to do that yet.  So I                                                                    
     aggregated  on 200  and  made this  little  map and  it                                                                    
     gives you a  really good idea of what's there.   I mean                                                                    
     you  could  convert  that to  a  mean  weight  estimate                                                                    
     fairly easily  and what it  shows is their  survey grid                                                                    
     there does  have the  population captured  pretty well.                                                                    
     You see the  black circles around the  outside are zero                                                                    
     counts so mostly, yea, they  did find where the bed was                                                                    
     with the dredge and that's where it is.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     These are  for small  scallops less than  50 millimeter                                                                    
     shell height.  You can  see they're not distributed the                                                                    
     same at  all.   They're over  here and  I have  not had                                                                    
     time to  go ahead  and overlay the  habitat data  but I                                                                    
     can  tell you  that  these scallops  are very  strongly                                                                    
     associated  with these  harder  bottoms, more  pebbles,                                                                    
     more emergent  epifauna.  And  this is the  tanner crab                                                                    
     results from  that same survey and  then, again, that's                                                                    
     why  I said  we did  this on  two different  days so  I                                                                    
     don't know,  maybe these  tanners that  we saw  here on                                                                    
     day one  moved over here by  day two and we  took their                                                                    
     pictures  twice.   I don't  know but  you get  a really                                                                    
     good idea of  where they are located in  that area with                                                                    
     the camera.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Then  the last  - one  of  the things  that we've  been                                                                    
     trying  to do  -  well,  that I've  been  trying to  do                                                                    
     besides  just  having  opportunities to  use  the  sled                                                                    
     more,  because  we're  just learning  how  to  use  it.                                                                    
     Basically it's been  a one time a year,  though it gets                                                                    
     crazy just  trying to get  everything to work,  get out                                                                    
     to sea,  people have  expectations about what  needs to                                                                    
     get  done.   Well, Dan  Doolittle  now is  over at  the                                                                    
     Kachemak  Bay  Research  Reserve  and he  is  a  friend                                                                    
     because  he was  in  the Kodiak  office  and he's  very                                                                    
     technologically oriented so he  said hey, how would you                                                                    
     like  to  come over  and  practice  using the  sled  in                                                                    
     Kachemak  Bay?   I said  great.   He  had this  project                                                                    
     they're talking  about expanding the Homer  boat harbor                                                                    
     there.  ... Army  Corps of  Engineers  funded this  and                                                                    
     that's  high  resolution  multibeam  data  that  really                                                                    
     shows the  bathymetry in  excruciating detail  and then                                                                    
     they  had some  diver surveys.   We  came along  and in                                                                    
     about  20  minutes  were  able   to  do  all  of  these                                                                    
     transects.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     This was  literally a stone's throw  off the breakwater                                                                    
     there.  You  looked out in the water and  it just looks                                                                    
     like mud  and you're  going man,  we're never  going to                                                                    
     see anything down there.   Well, actually it was a lens                                                                    
     of silty  fresh water on  top and there was  some clear                                                                    
     water on  the bottom and  that's what is  right outside                                                                    
     of the Homer boat harbor, a  lot of eel grass that gets                                                                    
     blown or  carried in there  by tide, sea pens,  and sea                                                                    
     stars.   And  there  are a  few fish.    There's a  big                                                                    
     sculpin there too.  After we  got done with that we had                                                                    
     plenty of time so we went  out in front of Homer off of                                                                    
     the bluff there  and that's just an example  of some of                                                                    
     the  harder bottom  habitat.   I just  love these  flat                                                                    
     fish, the  way they can camouflage  themselves with the                                                                    
     coloration.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     So  I just  had to  say a  couple of  things about  the                                                                    
     HabCam project.  This is  their vehicle and they tow it                                                                    
     off  the bottom,  which we're  kind  of thinking  about                                                                    
     doing with ours  and then they've also added  - this is                                                                    
     a  second, separate  towed  vehicle  that's just  doing                                                                    
     acoustics  so they're  basically  trying  to widen  the                                                                    
     swath that they  see through acoustics.   They have the                                                                    
     sled going and  then this thing is back  farther and it                                                                    
     has I  guess a  couple of different  kinds of  sonar on                                                                    
     it.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:25:41 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     That's  sort  of the  next  step  that they're  taking,                                                                    
     which looks  like a pretty  good one  to me.   And then                                                                    
     notice  this  is on  a  commercial  scallop vessel  and                                                                    
     there's  their dredge  in the  water at  the same  time                                                                    
     they're using the sensing imaging and sonar equipment.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     This  is  another  slide that's  ...  lent  from  Scott                                                                    
     Gallagher and  this just  kind of  shows what  they are                                                                    
     trying to do.   These are like real  time data products                                                                    
     that  you could  get out  of  this but  really, we  are                                                                    
     stuck right  up here.  We've  got down a little  bit of                                                                    
     manual classification.  We haven't  even done this step                                                                    
     with image  processing yet.   They're working  on that.                                                                    
     They're  working on  automated classification.   I  was                                                                    
     able this  year - we  were able through our  near shore                                                                    
     project to  get some funding  for them, for  the HabCam                                                                    
     people to  work on Alaska  data.  Well that  project is                                                                    
     going away so  that's one that I see a  huge need is to                                                                    
     keep helping  them.  I  mean we  need to get  money for                                                                    
     them to  look at our data  and we need to  just keep on                                                                    
     their  good side  because we  want to  get all  of this                                                                    
     stuff and  they're going to  develop this a  lot faster                                                                    
     and  better  than anybody  else  because  they are  the                                                                    
     experts.   Believe  me, this  is a  huge job.   Talking                                                                    
     about being  able to display  the data in  usable forms                                                                    
     where some  fishery managers could  have access  to the                                                                    
     data without having to look  through frame by frame but                                                                    
     trying to  distill usable data  products of it  is just                                                                    
     another huge  challenge that we  need to do.   And then                                                                    
     you get over  to okay, what are we going  to do?  Well,                                                                    
     patch  dynamics,  like  looking at  the  patchiness  of                                                                    
     different   species,   habitat,  predator/prey   multi-                                                                    
     species management models, and  this is where ecosystem                                                                    
     type of  thinking would probably  come in.   Really the                                                                    
     hardest challenge for them right,  all of this stuff is                                                                    
     hard  but   the  biggest  challenge  from   a  computer                                                                    
     processing   point   of   view  right   now   is   this                                                                    
     segmentation  where  you  want to  extract  regions  of                                                                    
     interest from image and, especially  now with our muddy                                                                    
     bottom, with  not that  many scallops  it might  not be                                                                    
     bad, but  when you get  on a complex bottom,  it's hard                                                                    
     to get the computer to  accurately pick the targets out                                                                    
     of it.   But they are working on that  and not only are                                                                    
     they  working  on it  but  they  are working  with  the                                                                    
     people  that  are  the  real   experts  at  Los  Alamos                                                                    
     National Labs.   Well, that's a  wonderful thing except                                                                    
     they're   DOD  and   it's  hard   for  anybody   to  do                                                                    
     cooperative  work with  DOD so  that's  kind of  slowed                                                                    
     things down and  Scott is a little  bit frustrated with                                                                    
     it but  there are  a couple of  people there  that have                                                                    
     some  ideas  and  some  algorithms  that  ought  to  be                                                                    
     helpful for this.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     So, my "to  do" list.  I  have a big "to do"  list.  We                                                                    
     want to  improve the  optics and  get that  whole image                                                                    
     into sharp focus and we  have some new hardware.  We're                                                                    
     going to work on that.   We're going to shoot through a                                                                    
     flat port  rather than  a dome.   We're building  a new                                                                    
     deck  house here,  hopefully within  the next  month or                                                                    
     two since the one we've been using was borrowed.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:29:18 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     In  June and  July  we're going  to  be doing  surveys,                                                                    
     Kayak Island,  Yakutat, and then the  Pandalus is going                                                                    
     up north to Norton Sound to  do a trawl survey up there                                                                    
     so I am trying to  convince people that we really ought                                                                    
     to put the camera on this  boat - well we'll still have                                                                    
     it on the  boat, leave it on there and  do some imaging                                                                    
     on the way  up there as well.  Additional  sensors - we                                                                    
     don't even  have a  CTD on  our sled  but we  ought to.                                                                    
     That  and,  we've been  looking  -  we recently  had  a                                                                    
     meeting  to  discuss  this  acoustics,  what  acoustics                                                                    
     should be added  to the package to gather  more data at                                                                    
     the same  time when we're  towing it around to  get the                                                                    
     images.   That led us to  flying off the bottom.   Well                                                                    
     most of the  acoustic type of things that  you would do                                                                    
     would be  much better off  if the vehicle was  not hard                                                                    
     on the bottom just because  you'd have more space below                                                                    
     you but also the vibration  of bouncing around could be                                                                    
     very problematic.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     And  then,  finally,  partnerships.   People  are  just                                                                    
     starting to  find out about  this now.   The Department                                                                    
     of  Fisheries and  Oceans in  Canada wants  to build  a                                                                    
     system and has  been calling me up.   Someone from NMFS                                                                    
     [National  Marine  Fisheries  Service]  in  Kodiak  has                                                                    
     called me  a couple of  times and wanted to  talk about                                                                    
     the data  and ways they  might be  able to use  some of                                                                    
     the data.   So there's just  a huge list of  things for                                                                    
     me to do and then the  thing to remember about, that is                                                                    
     I  have my  job  as statewide  scallop biometrician  as                                                                    
     well.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     So,  really,  our  biggest need  for  this  project  is                                                                    
     people and we actually have  the people.  Rick Sheppard                                                                    
     - I  can't say enough  good things  about him.   He won                                                                    
     the employee of  the year award six years  ago but he's                                                                    
     kind of one of our  most valuable players out in Kodiak                                                                    
     because  he   is  the  database  person   there.    And                                                                    
     everybody  in  Kodiak,  every  project  collects  data.                                                                    
     Most of it is  lying around.  Most of it  is on a bunch                                                                    
     of CDs or  in files there.  He's the  one that's making                                                                    
     the data  usable.  Well,  he's also the one  that wrote                                                                    
     the code to let our camera  talk to our network for our                                                                    
     system.  He's  the one that would be  most qualified to                                                                    
     start working  on ways to  display the data,  share the                                                                    
     data, etcetera, but  he is more than  fully tasked and,                                                                    
     just to  let you  know, he is  an Analyst  Programmer 4                                                                    
     and he's been trying to  hire an assistant for a couple                                                                    
     of years now.  They  downgraded the position ... it was                                                                    
     an Analyst  Programmer 3, a  2 and  a 1.   They finally                                                                    
     got one person to apply for  it at the 1 level and then                                                                    
     that person didn't  take the job.  So,  within Fish and                                                                    
     Game  the  people  that do  understand  technology  are                                                                    
     very, very few  and far between and they  are very hard                                                                    
     to  hire  because we  do  not  pay competitive  prices.                                                                    
     People that know how to do  that stuff can go and get a                                                                    
     lot  of  different jobs  and  the  State of  Alaska  is                                                                    
     pretty low on the list.   I'm sure that's true in other                                                                    
     departments  where  they  need  technical  expertise  -                                                                    
     computer networking, database, and etcetera.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:32:26 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Dan  Doolittle  has  a lot  of  [autonomous  underwater                                                                    
     vehicle] AUV experience and he  looked at this and said                                                                    
     this  instrument   pod,  if  you  will,   basically  is                                                                    
     attached  by   10  bolts.    So   we're  talking  about                                                                    
     decoupling that,  move the  telemetry bottle  on there,                                                                    
     add  a tail  for stabilization  and a  different bridle                                                                    
     and we might  be able to just tow this  off the bottom.                                                                    
     We're  going to  hopefully get  a chance  to experiment                                                                    
     with that  maybe next fall.   It's probably the  way we                                                                    
     want to  go for the  future, although having it  on the                                                                    
     bottom  is kind  of easier.    Then you  don't have  to                                                                    
     worry about  it.  That's  one of the problems  with the                                                                    
     HabCam  is  it's  always doing  this.  ...  There's  an                                                                    
     altimeter, an acoustic device  that measures height off                                                                    
     bottom but  it's very  difficult to fly  it at  a truly                                                                    
     level height.   Ours,  where it's  on the  bottom, one,                                                                    
     you don't have  to sit there watching  it every minute,                                                                    
     going oh,  I've got to  pull in  a little cable,  oh, I                                                                    
     need to  let a  little bit out  because it  stays about                                                                    
     the  same  so the  way  we're  doing  it is  more  user                                                                    
     friendly from that perspective.   It seems to work okay                                                                    
     on soft  bottoms but if  you had  it flying up  off the                                                                    
     bottom,  you wouldn't  have to  worry about,  you know,                                                                    
     unless you're  in pinnacles,  you could  go over  a lot                                                                    
     harder  bottoms and  it would  probably  be better  for                                                                    
     acoustic  sensing as  well so  we're probably  going to                                                                    
     try that.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     And then  one of the other  "to do" things is  just - I                                                                    
     keep looking  at all  of these closed  areas.   We have                                                                    
     not yet deployed the sled in  a closed area.  Here's an                                                                    
     example right  here, Unimak Bite.   This was  closed to                                                                    
     protect tanner  crab habitat  20 or 30  years ago.   No                                                                    
     one  even knows  if that's  working.   I  hear the  old                                                                    
     scallopers  talk  about deck  loading  out  there so  -                                                                    
     here's a tool  where you could actually go  and look in                                                                    
     some closed areas and see  what's there, maybe evaluate                                                                    
     whether they are an effective  tool.  With tanner crab,                                                                    
     I think it's  mostly wishful thinking.   There's just a                                                                    
     lot less  tanner crab around  now than there was  20 or                                                                    
     30 years  ago.   Really, I think  for the  future we're                                                                    
     really going more towards a  monitoring type of outlook                                                                    
     - I  am.  I  think as far as  environmental monitoring,                                                                    
     the  sled is  a  much better  tool than  a  trawl or  a                                                                    
     dredge.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     So, here's  where I will  stick my  foot in my  mouth a                                                                    
     little bit.  I guess I  didn't mention that after I got                                                                    
     done being a commercial fisherman  I went to college up                                                                    
     in Fairbanks and mostly took  math and statistics.  The                                                                    
     red boxes  are kind of  the way  things get done.   You                                                                    
     have  commercial  fishery  data,  you  have  trawl  and                                                                    
     dredge survey data.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:35:18 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ continued:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     This is an  issue that sometimes gets,  well often gets                                                                    
     overlooked  but each  species has  a  different set  of                                                                    
     catchability  and  selectivity   parameters  with  each                                                                    
     different kind of gear.   Basically you cram all of the                                                                    
     data you got into  a mathematical and statistical model                                                                    
     and then what  comes out is a number  and managers like                                                                    
     that  and I  give the  people that  have to  manage the                                                                    
     fisheries  a lot  of credit  because  they're the  ones                                                                    
     that have  to answer the  phone when irate  people call                                                                    
     up and  want an explanation  about the way  things are.                                                                    
     I mean  there are reasons why  we do things the  way we                                                                    
     do  and a  lot of  it is  managers want  something that                                                                    
     they can  point at when  they're asked why did  you set                                                                    
     the quota at  this level.  So that's  basically the way                                                                    
     that  we  do  it  but  the problem  is  we  don't  know                                                                    
     anything about  these recruitment processes,  no matter                                                                    
     how good  your data and  your modeling, you  really are                                                                    
     left with  hoping for recruitment because  if you don't                                                                    
     get any  recruitment for  a period  of years,  there is                                                                    
     not  going   to  be  anything   there  no   matter  how                                                                    
     conservatively you  manage the fishery.   So what we're                                                                    
     doing here  with the camera  sled is we're  starting to                                                                    
     bring spatially  explicit direct observation  data into                                                                    
     the picture.  Now how  we're going to incorporate that,                                                                    
     nobody knows  yet.   But this  is what  it is  and it's                                                                    
     fundamentally different  from trawl  or dredge  data or                                                                    
     fishery data  because you  don't have  the catchability                                                                    
     and selectivity problems  with that type of  gear.  You                                                                    
     see  what you  see.   There are  some limitations  with                                                                    
     water  clarity and  size but  it  avoids this  problem,                                                                    
     which  is a  huge problem.   And  then I'm  getting the                                                                    
     feeling that  there's sort  of enough  of a  wow factor                                                                    
     with the imaging to call  a little more attention to it                                                                    
     and get  over to  these two  the fact  that we  need to                                                                    
     look at  more oceanographic data  and we need  to start                                                                    
     thinking  about  ecosystem  approaches  to  management,                                                                    
     i.e. looking  at the whole picture,  using more spatial                                                                    
     kind  of  statistics  rather  than  just  taking  data,                                                                    
     running it  through a model,  getting out a  number and                                                                    
     then managing  the fishery off  of it because  really I                                                                    
     can't sit here and argue  that this is working all that                                                                    
     well.   There's not  a lot of  tanner crab  around now.                                                                    
     There just isn't and I  don't care how many surveys you                                                                    
     conducted.  That's not going  to bring more tanner crab                                                                    
     back  so I  think  we  need to  add  more  data to  the                                                                    
     picture is  probably the  best way in  my mind  to move                                                                    
     forward.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     That's really all I have  thanks to all of those people                                                                    
     on that list.  I also  have some just short clips, i.e.                                                                    
     movies  of data  if  you'd like  to look  at  a few  of                                                                    
     those.   Oh, no I don't.   Sorry, it's on  my computer.                                                                    
     I put my  presentation on this computer.   I could fire                                                                    
     this other one up while  people could ask me questions,                                                                    
     whatever your preference would be.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:38:43 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SEATON said he thought members would be interested in                                                                     
seeing the clips.  He then asked Mr. Rosenkranz if he has used                                                                  
an ecosystem  management model  with habitats  of concern  in the                                                               
federal  regulations or  whether  that is  a  possibility in  the                                                               
future.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ said he has not  used an ecosystem model.  He said                                                               
this  has been  frustrating for  him  because any  time one  gets                                                               
involved  with  council  processes,  such as  the  North  Pacific                                                               
Fishery  Management  Council,  it  is talked  about  but  nothing                                                               
further happens.   He related his  opinion that no one  is taking                                                               
the necessary steps  to figure out how to do  it.  Mr. Rosenkranz                                                               
commented   that  oceanographic   information  is   expensive  to                                                               
collect, which is  one benefit to the  seabed sled.  It  is a new                                                               
development to the ecosystem approach  of management.  The HabCam                                                               
people  are  defining  the  field  and,  by  maintaining  a  good                                                               
relationship  with them,  Alaska  will benefit  by learning  from                                                               
them.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:40:45 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SEATON pointed out that  fisheries managers want more data.                                                               
Alaska  is on  the forefront  of  this technology,  which is  one                                                               
reason why the committee wanted to  hear from Mr. Rosenkranz.  He                                                               
is pleased that ADF&G has taken this initiative.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:41:28 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ROSENKRANZ said  he  met  Scott Gallagher  at  a meeting  in                                                               
Seattle and when  he asked Mr. Gallagher whether  anyone else was                                                               
working on  underwater video techniques,  the answer was no.   He                                                               
said the technology  has come a long way; for  example, he opined                                                               
that people  on the  East Coast  will have  fiber optic  to their                                                               
homes in five or ten years.   Additionally, hardware is easier to                                                               
use and getting cheaper.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:42:28 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  EDGMON asked  whether  funds  other than  general                                                               
funds contribute to this effort.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ROSENKRANZ  stated that  his  position  is federally  funded                                                               
because  the scallop  fishery occurs  in both  state and  federal                                                               
waters.   The camera  sled project  has been  funded by  the CFEC                                                               
from the start.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:43:07 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  EDGMON   surmised  there  is  no   cost  recovery                                                               
component tied into this project.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SEATON said  not to his knowledge.   Alaska's congressional                                                               
delegation believes  Alaska needs to  step forward in  this arena                                                               
rather than ask.   He opined that the legislature  should let the                                                               
delegation  know that  the state  is  doing independent  projects                                                               
with state funds.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:44:02 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  EDGMON remarked  that he  thoroughly enjoyed  the                                                               
presentation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:44:20 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SEATON,  regarding acoustics  and mounting  different kinds                                                               
of sonar on  sleds using fiber optics to  provide enough capacity                                                               
to get the  data through, said avoidance data  could be collected                                                               
in many directions depending upon the orientation of the sonar.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ROSENKRANZ  said  that  is a  rapidly  developing  area  and                                                               
different types  of acoustic  sonar exist.   Right  now multibeam                                                               
sonar provides very accurate depth  maps, which show every ripple                                                               
and contour  along the  bottom.  Side-scan  sonar views  the side                                                               
and extends  to about 50 meters  wide.  The potential  is big but                                                               
he does not know the best way to  go at this point and he doesn't                                                               
believe  it would  be wise  to buy  an expensive  system at  this                                                               
time.   He  informed the  committee that  he is  cultivating some                                                               
relationships  with people  who might  allow ADF&G  to try  their                                                               
products.    He  said  he  is  excited  about  working  with  Dan                                                               
Doolittle in  Homer because he  would like  to use that  area and                                                               
the  research  reserve to  help  develop  more technology.    The                                                               
visitor center  could be used for  public outreach.  He  said the                                                               
bottom line is that he needs help.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:46:51 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ROSENKRANZ  showed members  his  video  clips and  said  the                                                               
following:                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     This is  at two  frames a  second.   We record  data at                                                                    
     four frames a  second, twice as fast as this.   This is                                                                    
     just some hard  bottom right there in  Kachemak Bay off                                                                    
     of  the bluff  there.    There are  a  bunch of  clams,                                                                    
     barnacles,   things  like   that  in   that  particular                                                                    
     habitat.  This  is also in the same area  where we just                                                                    
      went into shore so we started going over bigger and                                                                       
       bigger rocks.  That's some kind of steel something                                                                       
     there.  But this is right off the bluff in Homer.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:47:53 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SEATON  asked whether the  water was clear when  the images                                                               
were taken.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ROSENKRANZ said  he did  not  recall the  water clarity  for                                                               
those slides  but said in  general, freshwater floats on  top and                                                               
it  is often  silty.   He said  you never  know what  you'll find                                                               
until you  put the camera  down.   However, on softer  bottoms in                                                               
areas like Shelikof  Strait, suspended sediment can  be seen when                                                               
the tide runs hard.   He noted the current slide  was taken in an                                                               
area  of  a  depth of  a  few  fathoms  right  off of  the  Homer                                                               
breakwater in  December.  He  said the research reserve  in Homer                                                               
will allow research on seasonal changes  at the same place.  [Mr.                                                               
Rosenkranz  continued to  point out  marine life  in the  slides,                                                               
such as barnacles.]                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:50:41 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SEATON thanked Mr. Rosenkranz for his presentation.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:50:50 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOHNSON asked  if the  camera could  be put  on a                                                               
dredge to look at damage.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. ROSENKRANZ said  that has been done with  some older cameras.                                                               
Although the  purpose was not  to look  at damage but  to observe                                                               
how many scallops  went in and how  many did not, he  said he has                                                               
not found that  data to be very  useful.  He said he  has been on                                                               
dredge surveys.  The material looks  very different when it is in                                                               
its natural environment than when it is hauled on deck.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:51:56 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no  further business before the  committee, the House                                                               
Special  Committee on  Fisheries  meeting was  adjourned at  9:52                                                               
a.m.                                                                                                                            

Document Name Date/Time Subjects