greenedo wrote:
One option, of course is to grade and feed accordingly:
Have narrowly spaced bars, and if the fish can swim through them, they get to the finer feed first.
The next set of bars allow medium and small fish to get to the less fine feed next, then the course feed is dumped in the tank. That way, you can grade your fish (ring the dinner bell, and all the smaller fish go grab their dinner, and you grab the bigger ones.)
Automated training would be best, and I think that you could do it using the same system that aquaculturists use for grading the fish (progressively smaller spaced bars). The only thing is that you'd have to have a way to remove the grading bars after the feeding, or the fish would get fat and not be able to get back out after eating.
thank you for taking a positive attitude toward my idea, Greenedo, which is what is needed to solve a problem
your ideas are sound but inverted: of course the first set of bars in your setup must be wide and then narrower and narrower, or the big fish will not get any food at all
that is where the training and the automatisation might make a difference: with gradually opening apertures, the small fish would be first, and the bigger fish would still get what they want, you would not need to remove the grading bars as they would open to the size of the biggest fish, thus allowing them to "escape" unless you would want to hold the largest one(s) for harvesting.
there is also the possibility of "one way" gates to let fish escape.
RupertofOZ wrote:
I would contend Frank, that that's probably just not possible....
you obviously don't believe in the concept nor in the feasibility, Rupert
I respect that
now please take a step back and watch this thread develop either to a solution or to a dead end
in which case you will have the gratitude of saying: see, I told you, didn't I?
but be patient to do so
I might be proven wrong but so might you
please show the same respect to people who do not share your opinion by allowing them to develop an idea, even if that might lead to a flop
greetings
Frank