Institute of Environmental Engineering, Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering, ETH Zurich, Laura-Hezner-Weg 7, Zurich 8093, Switzerland; Laboratory of Hydraulics, Hydrology and Glaciology, Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering, ETH Zurich, Hönggerbergring 26, Zurich 8093, Switzerland.
Laboratory of Hydraulics, Hydrology and Glaciology, Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering, ETH Zurich, Hönggerbergring 26, Zurich 8093, Switzerland.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Nov 20;952:175679. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175679. Epub 2024 Aug 30.
Juvenile fish are known to be the most impacted during hydropeaking events due to stranding or uncontrolled drift resulting from changes to water depth and flow velocity. To shed light on their response to such hydraulic alterations, we coupled flume experiments with image-based fish tracking and quantified the fine-scale movement behavior of wild (n = 30) and hatchery-reared (n = 38) brown trout (Salmo trutta) parr. We exposed fish to two distinct hydropeaking treatments in a laterally inclined (14 %) flume section stocked with real cobbles to create refuge and heterogeneous hydraulic conditions. Fish were individually acclimated (20 min) to baseflow (Q = 1.6 L s-1) and then exposed to three consecutive hydropeaking events, reaching peakflows tenfold larger than baseflow (Q = 16 L s-1). We found that, within just minutes, fish exhibited fine-scale movement responses to cope with the change of hydrodynamic conditions. Fish moved perpendicular to the main flow direction to shallow areas as these became submerged during discharge increase, holding position at low velocity zones. This resulted in a significant difference (p < 0.001) in lateral occupancy of the experimental section between baseflow and peakflow. During peakflow, fish occupied specific positions around cobbles and exhibited swimming behaviors, including bow-riding and entraining, that allowed them to hold position while likely minimizing energy expenditure. As a result, swimming distance reduced 60-70 % compared to baseflow. During the decrease in discharge following peakflow, fish abandoned areas falling dry by moving laterally. In the treatment with the larger down-ramping rate, the time to initiate relocation was lower while the relocation speed was higher. This study shows that, for the conditions investigated here, brown trout parr is capable of swiftly deploying multiple behavioral responses to navigate rapid changes in hydrodynamic conditions. These findings can be incorporated into habitat modeling and improve our capacity to inform hydropeaking mitigation efforts.
幼鱼在遭遇水跃时受到的冲击最大,因为水深和流速的变化会导致它们搁浅或不受控制地漂流。为了了解它们对这种水力变化的反应,我们将水槽实验与基于图像的鱼类跟踪相结合,量化了野生(n=30)和养殖(n=38)褐鳟幼鱼的精细运动行为。我们在一个侧向倾斜(14%)的水槽部分中用真实鹅卵石来创造避难所和异质水力条件,对鱼进行了两种不同的水跃处理。鱼先在基流下(Q=1.6 L s-1)单独适应 20 分钟,然后暴露于三个连续的水跃事件中,峰值流量是基流的十倍(Q=16 L s-1)。我们发现,仅仅几分钟内,鱼就对水流条件的变化做出了精细的运动反应。当流量增加导致浅滩被淹没时,鱼会垂直于主流方向游向浅滩,并在低速区保持位置。这导致在基流和峰值流量之间,实验段的侧向占有率有显著差异(p<0.001)。在峰值流量期间,鱼会在鹅卵石周围占据特定位置,并表现出游泳行为,包括弓行和夹带,这些行为可以让它们保持位置,同时可能最小化能量消耗。因此,与基流相比,游泳距离减少了 60-70%。在峰值流量后的流量下降期间,鱼会通过侧向移动来放弃干燥的区域。在下降率较大的处理中,重新定位的时间更短,而重新定位的速度更高。本研究表明,对于这里研究的条件,褐鳟幼鱼能够迅速部署多种行为反应来应对水动力条件的快速变化。这些发现可以纳入栖息地建模,并提高我们为水跃缓解措施提供信息的能力。