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Developing zero-carbon aquaculture through data science

24 Oct 2019

A collaboration led by Victoria University of Wellington has received $13 million in funding to help New Zealand transition to a zero-carbon society by applying data science to the aquaculture industry.

鈥淣ew Zealand鈥檚 greatest opportunity to transition to a zero-carbon economy while improving livelihoods and wellbeing is to develop our aquaculture industry using data science,鈥 says Professor Mengjie Zhang from the University鈥檚 School of Engineering and Computer Science, who will lead the collaboration.聽

The University is working with Plant & Food Research, Cawthron Institute and University of Otago researchers on the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment-funded project.

Professor Zhang says, 鈥淭hrough this project we aim to develop innovative data science, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning techniques that will enable the aquaculture industry to keep growing efficiently and at large scale, producing high-quality, low-carbon protein for New Zealand and the world without compromising the environment.鈥

The collaboration will develop data science tools to optimise the farming of Greenshell mussels and finfish in open ocean farms.

鈥淐ollecting and incorporating various types of data through this project will unlock significant advantages for the aquaculture industry,鈥 says Professor Zhang. 鈥淔arm managers can use these data to drive decision-making when responding to climate challenges, managing disease, improving production yields, and farming sustainably at scale.鈥澛

The research team is aiming to develop innovative evolutionary and statistical learning techniques for use in the aquaculture industry, Professor Zhang says.聽

鈥淭hese learning techniques will help create better AI, which can be used to expand the capacity of the mussel and finfish farms,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is an area in which Victoria University of Wellington scientists are leaders and can bring significant expertise to the table.

鈥淚t is exciting to see data science becoming more integrated into New Zealand鈥檚 growing aquaculture sector to allow for more precise decision making and efficient production for the future, and we look forward to using data science in our work to develop new systems for open ocean aquaculture,鈥 says Dr Maren Wellenreuther, Science Group Leader at Plant & Food Research.聽聽

A significant focus for the programme is building M膩ori capacity in data science.

鈥淢膩ori own significant aquaculture assets but are under-represented in the field of data science,鈥 Professor Zhang says. 鈥淭his project aims to bring together data science and M膩ori communities with aquaculture interests.

鈥溙交ň intention is to help produce the next generation of M膩ori graduates capable of leading the technology development needed to scale up the industry.

鈥淲e also hope that this project will increase New Zealand鈥檚 overall capability in data science,鈥 says Associate Professor Ivy Liu, head of the University鈥檚 School of Mathematics and Statistics. A total of 12 PhDs, 16 Master鈥檚 and 35 honours students will be involved in the project along with 5 postdoctoral fellows and 35 summer research projects.

鈥淲e hope this will grow New Zealand鈥檚 capacity in data science by embedding academically trained, early-career scientists across a range of organisations linked to the aquaculture sector, alongside the data science programmes available and being developed at Victoria University of Wellington,鈥 Associate Professor Liu says.

The project also aims to foster national and international collaboration, bringing together a large group of educational, industry, and research organisations from New Zealand and around the world.聽

Dr Ross Vennell, Cawthron Institute lead researcher on the project, says aquaculture requires smart, data-driven decision making to help meet the government鈥檚 target of aquaculture being a 3-billion-dollar industry by 2035.

鈥淭his new collaboration brings together world-leading data science and aquaculture science expertise with decades of industry experience. New Zealand is set to become a global centre of excellence in data science and technologies for sustainable aquaculture.鈥


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