What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic review

Abstract Background Fish injury and mortality resulting from entrainment and/or impingement during downstream passage over/through hydropower infrastructure has the potential to cause negative effects on fish populations. The primary goal of this systematic review was to address two research questio...

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Main Authors: Dirk A. Algera, Trina Rytwinski, Jessica J. Taylor, Joseph R. Bennett, Karen E. Smokorowski, Philip M. Harrison, Keith D. Clarke, Eva C. Enders, Michael Power, Mark S. Bevelhimer, Steven J. Cooke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:Environmental Evidence
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13750-020-0184-0
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language English
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author Dirk A. Algera
Trina Rytwinski
Jessica J. Taylor
Joseph R. Bennett
Karen E. Smokorowski
Philip M. Harrison
Keith D. Clarke
Eva C. Enders
Michael Power
Mark S. Bevelhimer
Steven J. Cooke
spellingShingle Dirk A. Algera
Trina Rytwinski
Jessica J. Taylor
Joseph R. Bennett
Karen E. Smokorowski
Philip M. Harrison
Keith D. Clarke
Eva C. Enders
Michael Power
Mark S. Bevelhimer
Steven J. Cooke
What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic review
Environmental Evidence
Bypass
Evidence-based policy
Hydropower infrastructure
Injury risk
Mortality risk
Spillway
author_facet Dirk A. Algera
Trina Rytwinski
Jessica J. Taylor
Joseph R. Bennett
Karen E. Smokorowski
Philip M. Harrison
Keith D. Clarke
Eva C. Enders
Michael Power
Mark S. Bevelhimer
Steven J. Cooke
author_sort Dirk A. Algera
title What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic review
title_short What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic review
title_full What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic review
title_fullStr What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic review
title_full_unstemmed What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic review
title_sort what are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? a systematic review
publisher BMC
series Environmental Evidence
issn 2047-2382
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background Fish injury and mortality resulting from entrainment and/or impingement during downstream passage over/through hydropower infrastructure has the potential to cause negative effects on fish populations. The primary goal of this systematic review was to address two research questions: (1) What are the consequences of hydroelectric dam fish entrainment and impingement on freshwater fish productivity in temperate regions?; (2) To what extent do various factors like site type, intervention type, and life history characteristics influence the consequences of fish entrainment and impingement? Methods The review was conducted using guidelines provided by the Collaboration for Environmental Evidence and examined commercially published and grey literature. All articles found using a systematic search were screened using a priori eligibility criteria at two stages (title and abstract, and full-text, respectively), with consistency checks being performed at each stage. The validity of studies was appraised and data were extracted using tools explicitly designed for this review. A narrative synthesis encompassed all relevant studies and a quantitative synthesis (meta-analysis) was conducted where appropriate. Review findings A total of 264 studies from 87 articles were included for critical appraisal and narrative synthesis. Studies were primarily conducted in the United States (93%) on genera in the Salmonidae family (86%). The evidence base did not allow for an evaluation of the consequences of entrainment/impingement on fish productivity per se; therefore, we evaluated the risk of freshwater fish injury and mortality owing to downstream passage through common hydropower infrastructure. Our quantitative synthesis suggested an overall increased risk of injury and immediate mortality from passage through/over hydropower infrastructure. Injury and immediate mortality risk varied among infrastructure types. Bypasses resulted in decreased injury risk relative to controls, whereas turbines and spillways were associated with the highest injury risks relative to controls. Within turbine studies, those conducted in a lab setting were associated with higher injury risk than field-based studies, and studies with longer assessment time periods (≥ 24–48 h) were associated with higher risk than shorter duration assessment periods (< 24 h). Turbines and sluiceways were associated with the highest immediate mortality risk relative to controls. Within turbine studies, lab-based studies had higher mortality risk ratios than field-based studies. Within field studies, Francis turbines resulted in a higher immediate mortality risk than Kaplan turbines relative to controls, and wild sourced fish had a higher immediate mortality risk than hatchery sourced fish in Kaplan turbines. No other associations between effect size and moderators were identified. Taxonomic analyses revealed a significant increased injury and immediate mortality risk relative to controls for genera Alosa (river herring) and Oncorhynchus (Pacific salmonids), and delayed mortality risk for Anguilla (freshwater eels). Conclusions Our synthesis suggests that hydropower infrastructure in temperate regions increased the overall risk of freshwater fish injury and immediate mortality relative to controls. The evidence base confirmed that turbines and spillways increase the risk of injury and/or mortality for downstream passing fish compared to controls. Differences in lab- and field-based studies were evident, highlighting the need for further studies to understand the sources of variation among lab- and field-based studies. We were unable to examine delayed mortality, likely due to the lack of consistency in monitoring for post-passage delayed injury and mortality. Our synthesis suggests that bypasses are the most “fish friendly” passage option in terms of reducing fish injury and mortality. To address knowledge gaps, studies are needed that focus on systems outside of North America, on non-salmonid or non-sportfish target species, and on population-level consequences of fish entrainment/impingement.
topic Bypass
Evidence-based policy
Hydropower infrastructure
Injury risk
Mortality risk
Spillway
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13750-020-0184-0
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spelling doaj-19ce9cafb08e4093bd43c534ab3165e12021-01-31T16:08:10ZengBMCEnvironmental Evidence2047-23822020-01-019113610.1186/s13750-020-0184-0What are the relative risks of mortality and injury for fish during downstream passage at hydroelectric dams in temperate regions? A systematic reviewDirk A. Algera0Trina Rytwinski1Jessica J. Taylor2Joseph R. Bennett3Karen E. Smokorowski4Philip M. Harrison5Keith D. Clarke6Eva C. Enders7Michael Power8Mark S. Bevelhimer9Steven J. Cooke10Fish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory, Department of Biology, Carleton UniversityFish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory, Department of Biology, Carleton UniversityFish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory, Department of Biology, Carleton UniversityCanadian Centre for Evidence-Based Conservation, Institute of Environmental and Interdisciplinary Science, Carleton UniversityGreat Lakes Laboratory for Fisheries and Aquatic Science, Fisheries and Oceans CanadaFish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory, Department of Biology, Carleton UniversityNorthwest Atlantic Fisheries Centre, Fisheries and Oceans CanadaFreshwater Institute, Fisheries and Oceans CanadaDepartment of Biology, University of WaterlooOak Ridge National LaboratoryFish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory, Department of Biology, Carleton UniversityAbstract Background Fish injury and mortality resulting from entrainment and/or impingement during downstream passage over/through hydropower infrastructure has the potential to cause negative effects on fish populations. The primary goal of this systematic review was to address two research questions: (1) What are the consequences of hydroelectric dam fish entrainment and impingement on freshwater fish productivity in temperate regions?; (2) To what extent do various factors like site type, intervention type, and life history characteristics influence the consequences of fish entrainment and impingement? Methods The review was conducted using guidelines provided by the Collaboration for Environmental Evidence and examined commercially published and grey literature. All articles found using a systematic search were screened using a priori eligibility criteria at two stages (title and abstract, and full-text, respectively), with consistency checks being performed at each stage. The validity of studies was appraised and data were extracted using tools explicitly designed for this review. A narrative synthesis encompassed all relevant studies and a quantitative synthesis (meta-analysis) was conducted where appropriate. Review findings A total of 264 studies from 87 articles were included for critical appraisal and narrative synthesis. Studies were primarily conducted in the United States (93%) on genera in the Salmonidae family (86%). The evidence base did not allow for an evaluation of the consequences of entrainment/impingement on fish productivity per se; therefore, we evaluated the risk of freshwater fish injury and mortality owing to downstream passage through common hydropower infrastructure. Our quantitative synthesis suggested an overall increased risk of injury and immediate mortality from passage through/over hydropower infrastructure. Injury and immediate mortality risk varied among infrastructure types. Bypasses resulted in decreased injury risk relative to controls, whereas turbines and spillways were associated with the highest injury risks relative to controls. Within turbine studies, those conducted in a lab setting were associated with higher injury risk than field-based studies, and studies with longer assessment time periods (≥ 24–48 h) were associated with higher risk than shorter duration assessment periods (< 24 h). Turbines and sluiceways were associated with the highest immediate mortality risk relative to controls. Within turbine studies, lab-based studies had higher mortality risk ratios than field-based studies. Within field studies, Francis turbines resulted in a higher immediate mortality risk than Kaplan turbines relative to controls, and wild sourced fish had a higher immediate mortality risk than hatchery sourced fish in Kaplan turbines. No other associations between effect size and moderators were identified. Taxonomic analyses revealed a significant increased injury and immediate mortality risk relative to controls for genera Alosa (river herring) and Oncorhynchus (Pacific salmonids), and delayed mortality risk for Anguilla (freshwater eels). Conclusions Our synthesis suggests that hydropower infrastructure in temperate regions increased the overall risk of freshwater fish injury and immediate mortality relative to controls. The evidence base confirmed that turbines and spillways increase the risk of injury and/or mortality for downstream passing fish compared to controls. Differences in lab- and field-based studies were evident, highlighting the need for further studies to understand the sources of variation among lab- and field-based studies. We were unable to examine delayed mortality, likely due to the lack of consistency in monitoring for post-passage delayed injury and mortality. Our synthesis suggests that bypasses are the most “fish friendly” passage option in terms of reducing fish injury and mortality. To address knowledge gaps, studies are needed that focus on systems outside of North America, on non-salmonid or non-sportfish target species, and on population-level consequences of fish entrainment/impingement.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13750-020-0184-0BypassEvidence-based policyHydropower infrastructureInjury riskMortality riskSpillway