This Alphabet Spin-off Brings "Fishal Recognition" to Aquaculture

spectrum.ieee.org
6 min read
fairly difficult
Tidal's AI and robots make salmon farming more sustainable
Deep within a rugged fjord in Norway, our team huddled around an enclosed metal racetrack, full of salt water, that stood about a meter off the ground on stilts. We called the hulking metal contraption our "fish run." Inside, a salmon circled the 3-meter diameter loop, following its instincts and swimming tirelessly against the current. A stopwatch beeped, and someone yelled "Next fish!" We scooped up the swimmer to weigh it and record its health data before returning it to the school of salmon in the nearby pen. The sun was high in the sky as the team loaded the next fish into the racetrack. We kept working well into the evening, measuring hundreds of fish.

This wasn't some bizarre fish Olympics. Rather, it was a pivotal moment in the journey of our company, TidalX AI, which brings artificial intelligence and advanced robotics to aquaculture.

Tidal's AI systems track the salmon and estimate their biomass. TidalX AI

Tidal emerged from X, the Moonshot Factory at Alphabet (the parent company of Google), which seeks to create technologies that make a difference to millions if not billions of people. That was the mission that brought a handful of engineers to a fish farm near the Arctic Circle in 2018. Our team was learning how to track visible and behavioral metrics of fish to provide new insights into their health and growth and to measure the environmental impact of fish farms. And aquaculture is just our beginning: We think the modular technologies we've developed will prove useful in other ocean-based industries as well.

To get started, we partnered with Mowi ASA, the largest salmon-aquaculture company in the world, to develop underwater camera and software systems for fish farms. For two weeks in 2018, our small team of Silicon Valley engineers lived and breathed salmon aquaculture, camping out in an Airbnb on a small Norwegian island and commuting to and from the fish farm in a small motorboat. We wanted to learn as much as we could about the problems and…
Rajesh Jadhav, Kira K. Smiley, Grace C. Young
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