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Biotech Science

Wired Fish Monitor Water Toxins 20

boustrophedon writes "First miners used canaries to detect bad air. Now USA Today reports that municipalities monitor water quality by monitoring fish. The Bio-Sensor is a standard rack with eight 500 ml compartments, each containing a fish and a submerged sensor to detect a microvolt level bioelectric field. 'If at least six of the eight show signs of distress [typically due to a toxic condition], the Bio-Sensor sounds an alarm. It immediately saves a sample of the water (for more detailed analysis) while it notifies the humans in charge.'"
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Wired Fish Monitor Water Toxins

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  • by TykeClone ( 668449 ) <TykeClone@gmail.com> on Thursday October 14, 2004 @02:41PM (#10527218) Homepage Journal
    is to put lasers on their freaking heads.

    Is that too much to ask?

  • by vijaya_chandra ( 618284 ) on Thursday October 14, 2004 @03:05PM (#10527330)
    Efforts like this won't work in our place back in India and the fish used for testing are guaranteed to suffocate within a minute in most of the water bodies.

    The main problem actually in most of the areas is due to faulty distribution systems from the water-treating plants to the houses, where in some cases, the pipelines develop cracks letting stuff inside and sewage pipes (in case there are any) find a way to pass on some of their contents to the water pipelines.
  • ...you can understand...oh, never mind...
  • by WayneConrad ( 312222 ) * <`moc.ingay' `ta' `darnocw'> on Thursday October 14, 2004 @03:54PM (#10528046) Homepage

    This is an automated version of an idea that's been around awhile. When I was doing a computer installation for a water plant in Yuma, Arizona, maybe 8 years ago, I saw a fish tank in the control room. They fed a continuous supply of the plant's water through that tank. If the fish started acting funny or floated upside down, they would know to issue an alert and start testing water quality right now. It wasn't a substitute for laboratory testing of the water, but an adjunct to it. You can only do lab tests every so often, but fish are testing the water all the time.

    Even if they won't detect everything, fish are cheap, and that's important to the smaller water plants. Besides, the fish give the plant operator something to look at in between doing preventative maintenance and studying for the certification. Running a water plant is boring.

    • Same here. My father worked at a water treatment plant in Los Angeles, and he had the fish tank in his lab maybe 20 years ago. As I recall, the idea wasn't to test for instantaneous water quality problems, but rather long term toxicity of the water. My father was generally opposed to the idea, as the fish were in really small boxes maybe 6" on a side and kept in the dark until someone opened the lid and checked on 'em.
  • If these bio-sensors take the same route that computers took, pretty soon they'll start to miniturize them, and then we'll all be using...microfish.

    /ducks

  • sensors (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ryanelm ( 787453 ) *
    the best sensors that exist, as far as we know, are biological. in fact, the technology boom started 4 billion years ago. We will
    • never
    build a more advanced machine than a cell, the real challenge is to learn how to program the abundant hardware lying around to do something useful. these fish are a step in that direction.
  • Best internship I ever HAD!!! Drive around all day in the summer with GPS equipment and dip nets. Hooray for water quality grant money! http://www.shore.co.monmouth.nj.us/health/labpages /rba.asp

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