Further technical guidance
This page brings together a number of ancillary guidance
documents and previous email bulletin information relating to
modelling of marine fish-farms for CAR licence applications.
Auxiliary biomass sampling transect
In areas where the tidal residual current is weak, the auxiliary
transect (site-specific sampling 2) may be aligned along a bearing
reciprocal to the primary transect. As a guide, a reciprocal
transect may be suitable where the 30 ITI contour is more than 25m
from the cage edge on the ‘upstream’ side, with respect to the
residual current direction. Otherwise, the auxiliary transect
is best placed either adjacent and parallel to the primary
transect, or at some (<30o) deviation from the
primary transect.
Bath treatment depth
The 72hr model takes the results of the 3hr
model as the starting point of its iteration; it is important to
ensure that the cage depth is specified to permit at least one
treatment in 3 hours, otherwise it will attempt to model a
treatment of zero cages, and will fail. It may be necessary
to manually optimise the treatment depth value to the third decimal
place, in order to maximise the 24hr treatment limit, e.g.
treatment depth of 2.871m rather than 2.8m, this is effectively a
treatment depth of 2.9m.
Biomass sampling stations
Using the AutoDEPOMOD mapping tool
There are two methods by which suitable
sampling stations can be created using the mapping tool:
- set the ‘regular transect sampling’ interval to ‘10m’,
and select the two stations either side of the 30ITI contour;
or,
- having created a transect, use the measuring tool (SHIFT +
'set-sampling-station' tool Set Sampling Tool
) to identify the
distance from the transect start point to the 30ITI contour,
position the cursor on transect at 30ITI±10m, and release the
mouse-key. This technique is improved by zooming in on the
area of interest (the transect), and by ensuring the mapping tool
is expanded to the maximum extent afforded by the PC desktop.
Determining transect direction
Cage configuration, stocking plans, bathymetry
and currents combine to make setting transects that will adequately
provide a robust measure of the impact of farming operations
something of a dark art, but the following is a guide:
- look at the data summary to determine predominant current axes
at cage-bottom and near-bed - the sub-surface flow has little
bearing on deposition except at very shallow sites;
- based on the relative strength of these (i.e. proportion
exceeding resuspension threshold), determine either the mean of the
two, or use near-bed axis;
- examine the relative strength of the residual to the current
amplitude (along major axis); if the residual is of same order of
magnitude or greater, pick some bearing between the two, otherwise
use the major axis and ignore residual;
- see if this matches up with the modelled deposition footprint -
bear in mind that the footprint tends to elongate where it
lies across steep slopes (because it travels further before it
settles)
- tweak the bearing identified in 1 to 3, above, in the mapping
tool to try and follow the depth contours if possible, i.e. aim for
as a level a transect as possible.
- avoid placing transects that follow nebulous tongues of
deposition or cross isolated peaks, or that don’t have a continuous
decrease in concentration, i.e. no reversals of gradient.
Sampling transects at highly resuspensive sites
At sites where AutoDEPOMOD predicts so little
deposition beneath the cages that the 30ITI boundary is less than
25m from the cages, the default sampling protocol should be
employed, with sampling stations at cage-edge, 25m and 50m; the
direction of the sampling transect may be determined by running
AutoDEPOMOD with resuspension turned off, but the predicted ITI
values at the sampling stations should be derived with resuspension
on. To achieve this , a transect can be determined whilst
viewing one set of model results and then exported to a text file;
subsequently, whilst viewing the output from a different model run,
this transect can be imported, sampling stations set, and impact
predictions derived for reporting.
Only the cage edge location (i.e. start of the
transect), direction and depth should be specified in the ‘biomass’
sheet of the Marine Summary workbook; leave the AZE ±10m section
blank.
Current meter data collected prior to the requirement for
pressure data
Both treatment chemical and biomass licenses
are now primarily derived from the current data; consequently,
there is an enhanced environmental risk associated with this
data. Therefore, SEPA must insist on corroborative evidence
that the current data truly represents the flow-field at the cage
site.
The depth/pressure data component of the
current meter record serves three functions:
- to corroborate the current meter depth and position;
- to corroborate the time of the deployment and;
- to aid the repair of gaps in the data.
The first two are therefore for quality
control (QC), whilst the third reduces the need to redeploy the
meters. SEPA will accept up to 6 hour of repair in each
current meter dataset (see [LINK to] Attachment VIII to the ‘Fish
Farm manual’). A continuous pressure data record makes the
repair easier since it is often clear from the pressure data where
in the tidal cycle the repair is necessary and data from an
equivalent period of the tidal cycle can then be incorporated into
the dataset with a better accuracy. It should be noted that
data from sites with weak tidal currents, relative to other
influences, are difficult to repair satisfactorily.
Current meter data that are not accompanied by
a pressure record may be accepted if alternative satisfactory means
of depth, position and time quality control are available.
Examples of alternative QC evidence
include:
- Meter serial numbers in header data.
- Deployment log sheets with time, date, position, meter serial
numbers, &c.
- Predicted tidal heights, i.e. times of spring/neap tides and
clear differentiation between spring and neap currents in the
data.
SEPA’s assessment of older data will be made
on a case-by-case basis, evaluating the environmental risk
resulting from their use. If in doubt, please contact
FFModelling to discuss
the issue further.
Far-field area calculation error
It has come to our attention that there is an
error in the way in which AutoDEPOMOD calculates the far-field
area. The code in the FFMT sheet determines the area of each
group based on the cage dimensions plus 100m in all planar
directions; it then sums these to derive a value for the whole
site. This introduces an error where groups are less than
200m apart, since their respective far-field areas will
overlap.
In many situations the error is minimal or
does not affect the outcome, i.e. when the site passes without
iterating to an EQS compliant treatment. Where this is not
the case, the following workarounds may be employed:
1) Estimate the area of overlap (this is
easier for square cages) and subtract this value from the total
area calculated in the FFMT workbook; input the new value into the
appropriate cells in the Calicide and Slice EQS Test sheets of the
workbook.
2) Where the site consists of two or more
groups that form part of a continuous mooring grid but with gaps,
for instance to accommodate a feed-barge or where an odd-numbered
group has been specified using two groups, specify the whole
mooring grid to derive an estimate of the area and then re-specify
the individual groups; again, replace the appropriate values in the
EQS Test sheets. It may be necessary to make a slight
'guestimate' adjustment to account for the missing cages as the
resulting value will still be in error, but hopefully not as much
as if using the value generated for multiple groups.
3) Calculate the value manually from first
principles; again, replace the appropriate values in the EQS Test
sheets.
Whichever technique is employed, its use
should be reported.
We are keen to hear from anybody who can
propose an automated solution to this issue - please contact
FFModelling.
Hydrographic data analysis tool notes
Features
The current version of SEPA’s wind and current
data analysis tool has the following features:
- accepts current meter or wind data;
- automated detection of temporal resolution;
- calculates grid convergence;
- automated identification of major axis;
- tailored single-page summaries;
- key outputs formatted for easy transfer to BathAuto and
Marine-summary workbooks.
Bearings
Please note that the magnetic variation and
grid convergence corrections follow the clockwise convention for
numeric bearings, whereby corrections to the east are positive and
those to the west are negative, e.g. '4.5 degrees west' is entered
as '-4.5' or '355.5' - in this example, failure to specify the
right sign results in a 9 degree error in the resulting 'corrected'
value.
Export 'summary'
The 'summary' sheet has a 'print-area' already
set (this can be specified via the File menu) - if this is printed
to PDF, the resulting files can be inserted into a report or
circulated as an application-independent summary (and tend to be
much smaller than image files). Free PDF-printer software is
available from the web; CutePDF Writer is small and has been found
to be adequate for this purpose (this requires PS2PDF converter
software, e.g. GhostScript, to be installed) – there are many
equivalent alternatives.
Installing SURFER
It is important that Surfer is run
independently at least once before using AutoDEPMOD, as there are
ActiveX components that are only registered on the initial use; it
is these that AutoDEPOMOD calls. Failure to do so will
produce a ‘Run-time error 429’ error code.
Limits to in-feed chemicals released from dispersive sites
Where AutoDEPOMOD modelling of in-feed
chemicals results in significant export beyond the confines of the
model domain, SEPA requires that an assessment is made of the
potential to cause a reduction in the ecological status of the
benthos. Beyond the far-field allowable zone of effect,
surrounding a fish farm, in-feed chemical concentrations must not
exceed the defined environmental quality standards. The fate
of material exported from a site needs to be assessed taking
account of the following:
- the near bed current meter record, and the residual
currents
- the bathymetry and coastline of the surrounding area, in
particular, whether the material is likely to be transported to a
constrained or unconstrained receiving water,
- any major potential deposition areas that the material is
likely to be transported towards
- the potential for cumulative deposition,
- the likely concentration of the material in the receiving water
in relation to the far-field EQS criteria,
- the area of impact of the material if it is distributed evenly
at the far-field EQS concentration.
In addition to the license values achieved
with the modelling process, the applicant must also recommend a set
of license values which consider the assessment; the latter should
be presented in the Marine Summary workbook.
Read an outline
procedure
(84k) for assessing the
potential far-field impact and for determining total allowable
quantities based on available receiving area.
Shallow sites
SEPA’s hydrographic data specifications allow
for reduced current meter data at sites in charted depths of less
than 15m (chart datum [CD]), where only sub-surface and near-bed
records are required. However, AutoDEPOMOD requires current
data from three depths. This may be circumvented by using the
sub-surface dataset as a dummy cage-bottom record, configured at
some nominal height above the bed, just below (≤1m) the sub-surface
record.
Site survey and model bathymetry
SEPA requires that depth is measured at the
cage group corners as part of the site survey; in addition, where
charted bathymetric data is sparse, further depth measurements are
required at a distance from the cage group. This is to ensure
that the bathymetry of the area susceptible to the greatest impact
due to particulate wastes, beneath the cages and in the immediate
environs, is adequately represented in the configuration of the
model.
It is therefore crucial that these data are
integrated with any charted data prior to generation of the
AutoDEPOMOD grid files, and that the realism afforded by the
process is credible. Both the method used to integrate the
data, and an assessment of the success of its results should be
described in the modelling report.
Viable biomass
Ensure that your passing model run is
compliant with any target or maximum stocking density agreed in
advance with the applicant. The iteration process may lead to
a compliant biomass with a higher stocking density than may be
feasible, particularly if you elected to ignore the limit in the
‘Biomass limit’ dialogue by pressing ‘Cancel’. It may be
necessary to undertake a further single run, under the worst-case
tidal condition, at the maximum feasible stocking density.
AutoDepomodv2 automates the iteration to a
compliant discharge scenario, but care should be taken that the
final answer is the result that you require.
The method described has been developed to try
and encourage farming in the most suitable locations. For a
given hydrographic profile, a deeper site will perform more
favourably than a shallower one. For a given depth, a
well-flushed site will perform more favourably than a quiescent
one. For a given site, a cage layout which has shallow, well
spread out cages, with a low stocking density will perform more
favourably than a layout with deep cages, close together with a
high stocking density. These factors should all be taken into
account when modelling the site. Liaison with the applicant
will be required to ensure that the final design of the cage set-up
is realistic, in order to avoid a potential breach of license.
Windows 7, Office 2010 & AutoDEPOMOD
AutoDEPOMOD and the mapping tool have been
tested under the Windows7 64 bit environment with Office
2010. They have been shown to work after careful installation
of the transect tool; the following describes this process:
The DLL
that the transect tool uses does
not register properly upon installation under Windows 7 (32 or 64
bit) - so it doesn't work – fixing this involves two factors:
- You need to use the version of regsvr32.exe stored in
C:\Windows\SysWoW64 not the one on C:\WINDOWS\System32 (this
affects only the 64 bit system)
- You need to register the DLL as an Administrator (this affects
both 32 and 64 bit versions of Windows7)
Here's how to do it:
- In the new command window navigate to C:\windows\SysWoW64, i.e.
type cd c:\windows\syswow64
- type and execute: regsvr32.exe "C:\SEPA
Consent\displaymaps.dll” (assuming you installed
AutoDEPOMOD to 'C:\SEPA Consent' - if not change the path to where
it was installed)
- if successful you should get a an 'OK' successful
dialogue.
Because of the macros in the Excel workbooks
(FFMT.xls and FFin.xls) there may also be an issue with macro
security depending on how your IT support have set up users on your
computer.
An alternative approach is to run AutoDEPOMOD
on a virtual Windows XP machine within Windows7; refer to Wikipedia
for an explanation of this
concept. This has been successfully implemented using
VirtualBox
, but requires a copy of the Windows XP operating system.