4.6 Article

Dispersal of fish eggs and larvae in a cascade of small hydropower plants with fish ladders

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 849, Issue 2, Pages 339-356

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-020-04425-5

Keywords

Fish passage; Ichthyoplankton; River conservation; Sapucai-Mirim River

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES)

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This study investigates the dispersal of fish eggs and larvae in a river stretch affected by small hydropower plants in Southeast Brazil. The findings suggest that due to the small size of the studied reservoirs, downstream dispersal of free-flowing eggs and larvae is likely to occur, with the fish ladder facilitating passage through the dam. The study also highlights the impact of rainfall/flow variation and the reproductive cycle stage on the downstream dispersal, with peak rainfall during the summer coinciding with higher abundances. Eggs and larvae drifted downstream through the reservoirs and reached the dams, where they were able to pass through the fish ladder.
This study was conducted to investigate fish eggs and larvae dispersal in a river stretch influenced by small hydropower plants in Southeast Brazil. The main hypothesis is that the downstream dispersal of free-flowing eggs and larvae is likely to occur given the small size of the studied reservoirs and that passage through the dam may occur, with the fish ladder contributing to it. Eggs and larvae were collected fortnightly, between November 2016 and February 2017, from locations upstream of two dams, including lotic, transition and lentic zones. Additional samples were collected inside the fish ladders at each dam. Downstream dispersal of eggs and larvae was influenced by a combination of rainfall/flow variation and stage of the reproductive cycle, with the peak of rainfall during the summer coinciding with higher abundances. Under these conditions, eggs and larvae drifted downstream through the reservoirs and reached the dams. Once in the dam, they could pass through the fish ladder. This passage was correlated with larval density in the reservoir immediately upstream, although at very low densities compared with the other sampling sites located upstream of the fish ladders.

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