SUMMARYThe performance of oscillating water column (OWC) systems depends on a number of factors in a complex manner. The objective of this work is to analyse the influence of the wave conditions, the damping caused by the turbine and the tidal level on the efficiency of the conversion from wave to pneumatic energy that occurs in the OWC chamber. To achieve this, a comprehensive experimental campaign is carried out, involving in total 387 tests of a model OWC under varying wave conditions (both with regular and irregular waves), damping coefficients and tidal levels. It is found that the damping exerted by the turbine is the factor that most affects the chamber efficiency-even more than the wave conditions. It follows that a proper selection of the turbine is crucial not only to the performance of the turbine itself but also to that of the chamber, which reflects the importance of the turbine-chamber coupling in OWC systems. The next factor in order of importance is the wave period. Finally, we find that the influence of the tidal level, which is examined in this work for the first time, is significant under certain conditions.
Management and technical approaches that achieve a sustainable level of fish production while at the same time minimizing or limiting the wider ecological effects caused through fishing gear contact with the seabed might be considered to be 'best practice'. To identify future knowledge-needs that would help to support a transition towards the adoption of best practices for trawling, a prioritization exercise was undertaken with a group of 39 practitioners from the seafood industry and management, and 13 research scientists who have an active research interest in bottom-trawl and dredge fisheries. A list of 108 knowledge-needs related to trawl and dredge fisheries was developed in conjunction with an 'expert task force'. The long list was further refined through a three stage process of voting and scoring, including discussions of each knowledge-need. The top 25 knowledge-needs are presented, as scored separately by practitioners and scientists. There was considerable consistency in the priorities identified by these two groups. The top priority knowledge-need to improve current understanding on the distribution and extent of different habitat types also reinforced the concomitant need for the provision and access to data on the spatial and temporal distribution of all forms of towed bottom-fishing activities. Many of the other top 25 knowledge-needs concerned the evaluation of different management approaches or implementation of different fishing practices, particularly those that explore trade-offs between effects of bottom trawling on biodiversity and ecosystem services and the benefits of fish production as food.
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