Silver eel downstream migration in the River Rhine, route choice, and its impacts on escapement: A 6-year telemetry study in a highly anthropized system

TitreSilver eel downstream migration in the River Rhine, route choice, and its impacts on escapement: A 6-year telemetry study in a highly anthropized system
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursTrancart, T, Tétard, S, Acou, A, Feunteun, E, Schaeffer, F, de Oliveira, E
JournalEcological Engineering
Volume123
Pagination202 - 211
ISSN0925-8574
Mots-clésEscapement, Migration, Path selection, Rhine river, Silver-eel, Telemetry
Résumé

Several routes are available for the downstream migration of silver eels in the river Rhine system. Very different effects on migration success can result from this choice, such as speed and migration duration or escapement rate. We studied the downstream migration of silver eels in a river section with two different routes. The first route is the initial and old riverbed, with two dams equipped with two rather small or medium sized hydropower plants (HPPs) located at the beginning and at the exit of the bypass stretch. Both HPPs have small bar spacing (10 mm and 20 mm, respectively) and the second HPP has two downstream bypasses. The second route is a power canal, supplying four major HPPs (maximum discharge capacity = 1400 m3 s−1) and a nuclear power plant with cooling water. Firstly, this study focused on highlighting the factors influencing route choice. Secondly, we focused on the consequences of this choice. We demonstrate that water current management in the old riverbed at the study site had a 40% higher negative effect on eel survival than that by a consecutive passage in four turbines.

URLhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0925857418303318
DOI10.1016/j.ecoleng.2018.09.002
Catégorie HCERES
ACL - Articles dans des revues à comité de lecture
Publication coopération et recherche SUD
Non