Claims
- 1. A method of harvesting zooplankton comprising towing a trawl net behind a vessel in coastal waters through a location of zooplankton and above the bottom of said coastal waters, said net being flexible and having an open forward end and a rearward cod end to gather said zooplankton, a first member to maintain said open end of said net at a predetermined depth below the surface of said coastal waters where said zooplankton are located, a cage in said cod end of said net to maintain said cod end of said net in an open condition, said case having an inlet for ingesting said zooplankton gathered by said net at the most rearwardly positioned location of said cage such that said zooplankton flow smoothly rearwardly through said net and cage and into said inlet and a pump operably connected to said cod end of said flexible net to continuously remove said zooplankton from said cod end of said flexible net to a shipboard location.
- 2. A method of harvesting zooplankton as in claim 1 and further comprising dewatering said zooplankton at said shipboard location.
- 3. A method of harvesting zooplankton as in claim 2 and further comprising freezing said dewatered zooplankton.
- 4. A method of harvesting zooplankton as in claim 1 wherein said zooplankton comprise euphausiids.
- 5. Apparatus for harvesting zooplankton from coastal waters comprising a flexible trawl net having an open end and a rearward cod end, a new tow device to pull said net behind a towing vessel above the bottom surface of said coastal waters, first members to maintain said open end of said trawl net at a predetermined depth below the surface of said coastal waters, a cage at said cod end of said net to maintain said cod end of said net in an open configuration and a pump to pump said zooplankton from said cod end of said net to a shipboard location through a flow member, said flow member having a suction end in said cage, said zooplankton flowing rearwardly through said net and cage and into said suction end of said flow member without essential forward or rotational movement.
- 6. Apparatus for harvesting zooplankton as in claim 5 wherein said pump is a diaphragm pump.
- 7. Apparatus for harvesting zooplankton as in claim 5 and further comprising a dewatering device to dewater said zooplankton at said shipboard location.
- 8. Apparatus for harvesting zooplankton as in claim 7 and further comprising a freezing device to freeze said zooplankton at said shipboard location.
- 9. Apparatus for harvesting zooplankton as in claim 5 wherein said zooplankton comprise euphausiids.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2134515 |
Oct 1994 |
CAX |
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Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/202,593 filed Feb. 28, 1994. This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/386,507 filed Feb. 10, 1995 now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (24)
Foreign Referenced Citations (8)
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467 003A1 |
Jul 1990 |
EPX |
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Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry |
Paper entitled "A New Process for the Utilization of Antarctic Krill" by T. Ellingsen and V. Mohr. Date Unknown and Journal Unknown. |
Paper entitled "Autolysis Of Antarctic Krill Protein And Its Inactivation By Combined Effects Of Temperature and pH*" by M. Kubota and K. Sakai, Tokyo University, Mar. 1973. Transactions of the Tokyo Univ. of Fisheries, No. 2, pp. 53-63. |
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Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
386507 |
Feb 1995 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
202593 |
Feb 1994 |
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