4.4 Article

Effectiveness of pulse flows in a regulated river for inducing upstream movement of an imperiled stock of Chinook salmon

Journal

AQUATIC SCIENCES
Volume 76, Issue 2, Pages 231-241

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00027-013-0332-5

Keywords

Artificial freshets; Oncorhynchus spp.; Chinook salmon; Hydropower; Migration; Fish telemetry

Funding

  1. BC Hydro
  2. Alexander Graham Bell Canadian Graduate Scholarship
  3. Canada Research Chairs program
  4. NSERC

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We assessed the effectiveness of pulse flows in facilitating the upstream migration of an imperiled summer-run Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) stock in the Puntledge River, BC, Canada. During July and August, over 3 years, we tracked radio-tagged fish (n = 100) in a reach of the Puntledge River where water is diverted for power generation, resulting in stable low flows that are believed to impede migration. Over the course of 13 pulse flows, we measured migration rate, passage rate at natural barriers that are difficult to pass during low flows, movement away from the turbine outlet pool that creates distracting flows, and locomotor activity. Mean river flow during the peak of the pulses varied from 12.1 to 42.5 m(3) s(-1) and was at least 6.1 m(3) s(-1) above residual base flows. Typically, the pulse flows lasted 48 h. Migration rate was higher during some pulse flows, but results varied among pulses. Passage at natural barriers was only higher during an abnormal pulse where flows reached twice that of the prescribed flow (i.e., 24+ m(3) s(-1)). Some fish moved away from the turbine outlet pool during pulse flows. Pulse flows did not affect fish activity levels, as measured by electromyogram telemetry. Although the effect of pulsed flows on the migration of the Puntledge River summer-run Chinook salmon was unclear, no negative impacts, such as hyperactivity or downstream displacement were observed. The use of pulse flows as a management tool still requires further research.

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