Aquaculture and Fisheries (Mar 2021)

Effects of plunge pool configuration on downstream passage survival of juvenile blueback herring

  • Theodore Castro-Santos,
  • Kevin B. Mulligan,
  • Micah Kieffer,
  • Alexander J. Haro

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 135 – 143

Abstract

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Anadromous alosines are widespread throughout the Northern Hemisphere. Juveniles of this clade are notoriously fragile animals that are at high risk of injury and death associated with passage at hydroelectric facilities. Although turbine mortality is a common concern, conditions encountered when bypassed around these routes may also be hazardous. Downstream bypass structures typically discharge into plunge pools, which are highly turbulent and may cause mechanical injury. We subjected live, actively migrating juvenile blueback herring to a suite of realistic plunge pool conditions (3 m drop, pool depth of 60–180 cm, and discharge of 0.28–1.70 m3/s) and monitored them for ≥ 96 h. Survival was generally higher than expected (>80% in all cases). However, both plunge pool volume and total discharge affected survival with elevated discharge and shallow conditions associated with increased mortality. Mortality was often delayed: rates remained elevated throughout the monitoring period, indicating that survival studies based on shorter periods underestimate total mortality.

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