Response of downstream migrant juvenile Pacific salmonids to accelerating flow and overhead cover. [In special issue on: Hydropower, Flood Control and Water Abstraction: Implications for Fish and Fisheries]
Response of downstream migrant juvenile Pacific salmonids to accelerating flow and overhead cover. [In special issue on: Hydropower, Flood Control and Water Abstraction: Implications for Fish and Fisheries]
Mechanical structures designed to divert or guide juvenile migrant salmon at dams often work less effectively than expected. This likely results from a lack of understanding of fish behaviour. In order to address this, a series of experiments was conducted at McNary dam, USA, to assess the influence of hydraulic transition and overhead cover on the behaviour of seaward migrating juvenile Pacific salmon. Fish passing through a flume encountered a choice of route that varied based on hydraulic factors and overhead cover. Direct observation revealed that individuals elicited strong avoidance behaviour when they encountered areas where hydraulic conditions changed rapidly or were covered. Our findings have implications relevant to fish pass design and culvert restoration in Europe. Critically, improvement of current fish pass design and development of alternative mechanisms that effectively block fish access to, and divert fish away from poor passage routes, requires consideration of the behavioural component of fish migration.
salmon, smolts, fish passage, screens, behaviour
205-217
Kemp, Paul S.
9e33fba6-cccf-4eb5-965b-b70e72b11cd7
Gessel, Mike H.
243e4ae0-3516-4fcd-8541-2d98b81c481b
Williams, John G.
8af57e50-bcaf-4da4-ba08-42782858e0df
19 June 2008
Kemp, Paul S.
9e33fba6-cccf-4eb5-965b-b70e72b11cd7
Gessel, Mike H.
243e4ae0-3516-4fcd-8541-2d98b81c481b
Williams, John G.
8af57e50-bcaf-4da4-ba08-42782858e0df
Kemp, Paul S., Gessel, Mike H. and Williams, John G.
(2008)
Response of downstream migrant juvenile Pacific salmonids to accelerating flow and overhead cover. [In special issue on: Hydropower, Flood Control and Water Abstraction: Implications for Fish and Fisheries].
Hydrobiologia, 609 (1), .
(doi:10.1007/s10750-008-9412-2).
Abstract
Mechanical structures designed to divert or guide juvenile migrant salmon at dams often work less effectively than expected. This likely results from a lack of understanding of fish behaviour. In order to address this, a series of experiments was conducted at McNary dam, USA, to assess the influence of hydraulic transition and overhead cover on the behaviour of seaward migrating juvenile Pacific salmon. Fish passing through a flume encountered a choice of route that varied based on hydraulic factors and overhead cover. Direct observation revealed that individuals elicited strong avoidance behaviour when they encountered areas where hydraulic conditions changed rapidly or were covered. Our findings have implications relevant to fish pass design and culvert restoration in Europe. Critically, improvement of current fish pass design and development of alternative mechanisms that effectively block fish access to, and divert fish away from poor passage routes, requires consideration of the behavioural component of fish migration.
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Published date: 19 June 2008
Keywords:
salmon, smolts, fish passage, screens, behaviour
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Local EPrints ID: 52632
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/52632
ISSN: 0018-8158
PURE UUID: c307ead6-1a76-4b6a-9c15-fc6d80d5fe03
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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:42
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Author:
Mike H. Gessel
Author:
John G. Williams
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