Vision-Guided Underwater Robot to Eliminate Harmful Starfish in the Great Barrier Reef

Designed to seek out and eliminate the Great Barrier Reef’s crown-of-thorns (COTS) starfish, the COTSbot vision-guided underwater robot from the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) just recently completed its first sea trials.

 Crown-of-thorns starfish are responsible for an estimated 40% of the reef’s total decline in coral cover, and while people are doing a good job of controlling them, further action is needed.

"Human divers are doing an incredible job of eradicating this starfish from targeted sites but there just aren't enough divers to cover all the COTS hotspots across the Great Barrier Reef," said Dr. Matthew Dunbabin from QUT's Institute for Future Environments. "We see the COTSbot as a first responder for ongoing eradication programs - deployed to eliminate the bulk of COTS in any area, with divers following a few days later to hit the remaining COTS.”

The Right Camera

The vehicle is able to autonomously navigate via a vision system based on a stereo camera setup looking downwards and a single camera looking forward. The downward cameras are used to detect the starfish, while the front-facing camera is used for navigation. The cameras used were CM3-U3-13S2C-CS Chameleon 3 color cameras from FLIR, which are 44 mm x 35 mm x 19.5 mm enclosed USB 3.1 cameras that feature Sony’s ICX445 CCD image sensors. The ICX445 is a 1/3" 1.3 MPixel CCD sensor with a 3.75 µm pixel size that can achieve frame rates of 30 FPS.

Read the full article at Vision Systems Design

Reprinted with permission from the Vision System Design article,"Vision-guided underwater robot to seek and destroy harmful starfish in the Great Barrier Reef", (09/24/2015).

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