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Hindrances to upstream migration of atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in a northern Swedish river caused by a hydroelectric power-station

Authors :
Hans Lundqvist
Peter Rivinoja
Skip McKinnell
Source :
Regulated Rivers: Research & Management. 17:101-115
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
Wiley, 2001.

Abstract

Many Baltic salmon rivers have lost their natural juvenile production due to human activities blocking or reducing access to their spawning grounds, e.g. damming, power generation, partial hinders, etc. One such hindrance is a hydroelectric complex located in the lower reaches of River Umealven in northern Sweden. Water from the forbay created by the dam Norrfors is directed to the Stornorrfors power-station. At times, 100% of the river water is directed to the power-station. Water from the power-station then flows via a tunnel and outlet channel to the river. From the point of the tunnel's discharge into the river, the old river bed acts as a bypass channel directing migrating adult fish to a fish ladder located at the base of the dam. In this study, the effect that an additional turbine, that was installed at the power-station in 1986, had on fish passage run-time was examined. Changes in run-time were compared for two periods 1974–1985 and 1986–1995. In 1997, 55 wild and 25 hatchery salmon were captured in the Umealven estuary, radio tagged with uniquely coded tags, and tracked upstream. Both manual and automatic loggers were used to locate fish daily. The main findings show that only 26% of the wild salmon and none of the hatchery salmon found the fish ladder. It is suggested that the salmon followed the main water discharge from the power-station outlet and are thus directed away from the entrance to the bypass channel leading to the fish ladder. Salmon respond by moving upstream or downstream depending on the current flow regimes. The bypass channel consists of partial hinders that may explain why it takes on average 52 days for the salmon to migrate 32 km from the estuary to the fish ladder. Adding a fourth turbine at the power-station did not appear to have changed the timing of the migration or the seasonal distribution of the migrating wild salmon through the fish ladder. There was no significant effect of the fourth turbine on the duration of the middle 50% of the run in any weight-class for wild salmon. Daily turbine discharges or ambient water temperature and daily counts of wild salmon at the fish ladder were not related. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Details

ISSN :
10991646 and 08869375
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Regulated Rivers: Research & Management
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ae496d3873428c301bf2e48f1dd7ff84