STEREO-VIDEO SURVEYS OF DEEP WATER HABITATS
M. R. Shortis 1 , J. W. Seager 2 , A. Williams 3 , and B. A. Barker 3
’Science, Engineering and Technology Portfolio, RMIT University, GPO Box 2476V, Melbourne 3001, Australia
2 SeaGIS P/L, PO Box 1085 Bacchus Marsh, 3340, Australia
3 CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, GPO Box 1538 Hobart, 7001, Australia -
mark.shortis@rmit.edu.au
Commission V, WG 5
KEY WORDS: Stereo-Video, Towed Body, Deep Water, Fisheries, Marine Habitat
ABSTRACT:
Towed body systems of various configurations have been used for many years to map the seabed. Until recently, single video
camera systems were widely used to gather qualitative data, or collect often low-accuracy quantitative data using laser dot patterns
projected into the field of view. The introduction of stereo-video systems has enabled the capture of accurate and reliable spatial
information with estimates of accuracy and precision. CSIRO has recently adopted stereo-video on a towed body system used for
habitat mapping and biodiversity survey work in the deep ocean (100 to 2,000 m depths). This paper provides an overview of the
research context, describes the towed body system, reports on the use of stereo-video and the calibration of the system. Applications
of the system to managing marine biological resources are illustrated using examples from surveys undertaken recently off south east
Australia.
1. INTRODUCTION
Global attention on marine benthic biodiversity conservation
has rapidly increased over the last few decades, primarily due to
the depletion of fish stocks and degradation of the environment.
The response to a widespread concern for effective
conservation has resulted in the implementation of Marine
Protected Areas (MPAs), which has consequently generated the
need for multi-scale maps of seabed habitat (Williams et al.,
2005). In addition, the acknowledgement that fisheries need to
be managed for ecological sustainability, rather than simply on
the basis of regulating catch or effort, has generated the need to
understand and quantify the interactions of fishing gear with the
benthic environment (Hobday et al., 2006; McShane et al.,
2007).
Australia is developing a national network of MPAs in offshore
waters where virtually all areas are expected to be deeper than
SCUBA diving depths (>50 m); this is the case off south
eastern Australia where the first part of the network has been
declared (DEWR, 2007). Further, a large proportion of total
fisheries catches in Australia are taken below SCUBA depths,
leading to a requirement for remote data capture to survey and
monitor deep water regions.
activities. Information from surveys is being integrated to
produce habitat maps at various scales of resolution so that the
multi-scale structure of benthic habitats (figure 1) can be
understood and natural regions can be identified as planning
units.
Research information on deep seabed habitats has to be
gathered remotely and information is required from many
locations, consequently towed camera systems are an integral
part of the mapping capability. Towed systems are able to take
data along many kilometres of transects, and traverse rough and
steep seabed topography. A key role for geo-referenced video
sequences is to provide fine-scale detail that complements
coarser scale of mapping provided by hydro-acoustics (Kloser
et al., 2007). This integration of scales is needed to understand
the broad scale issues across the fishery regions or management
planning units as a whole.
This paper describes a towed body system developed in
Australia for these purposes, and focusses on the incorporation
of stereo-cameras that enable quantitative data to be taken from
imagery. Applications of the data for managing marine
biological resources are illustrated with a range of examples.
Figure 1. Multi-scale mapping of habitats - regional, feature
and fine scales.
As a consequence, deep benthic 1 habitats are being mapped to
support the development of an integrated and ecosystem-based
approach to plan (Kloser et al., 2007) and manage human
l
Living on the surface of bottom sediments in a water body.
2. TOWED BODY SYSTEM
The primary survey tool is a towed camera platform that
records continuous, medium resolution stereo-video sequences
and intermittent high-resolution digital still images along
transects. The platform operates to depths of 2,000 metres and
is connected to the vessel via a 3,200 metre steel-armoured
cable containing fibre-optic and conducting wires. Two PAL
video cameras, configured as a stereo-pair, transmit live video
sequences that are recorded on time-coded DV tape. The
recordings are indexed to navigation data from the differential
global positioning system (DGPS) on the vessel and links to
ultra short baseline (USBL) tracking beacon data on the towed
body, so that imagery can be accurately geo-located. Geo