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2014_Frome: Impacts of in-river hydropower production on European eel in the River Frome, southern UK Citation Basic, T., Piercy, J., Moore, A. (2015) Impacts of in-river hydropower production on European eel in the River Frome, southern UK. https://marineinfo.org/id/dataset/6385 Contact: Basic, Tea Availability: This dataset is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Description The EU Directive on promoting the use of renewable energy stipulates mandatory national targets for energy produced from renewable sources and hydropower is identified as one of the means of achieving them. This has led to renewed interest in the construction of small “run-of-river” hydroelectric schemes, developed particularly on existing structures (e.g. weirs), more There are estimated to be about 26,000 locations where a hydropower turbine could produce electricity in the UK. Previous studies on larger hydropower schemes have indicated that the potential environmental impacts of such schemes include: changes in fish population structure; habitat alterations; loss of crucial spawning and nursery habitat; loss of biological diversity; modifications to water quality and hydrological regimes; barriers to fish migration, and disruption of longitudinal connectivity. There are concerns that small hydroelectric schemes may cause similar environmental problems and any impacts may potentially lead to changes in fish population dynamics and thus, deterioration of the river ecological status, which contravenes obligations under the EU Water Framework Directive to achieve good ecological status or potential in all surface water and ground water in all Member States (European Commission Directive 2000). These small hydroelectric schemes may cause direct mortalities to fish (e.g. where fish encounter turbines) and/or indirect mortalities (e.g. where delays to migration make fish more vulnerable to predation). However, there appears to be an acute lack of hard evidence about the impacts of run-of-river schemes on fish passage at single structures, the potential cumulative impacts of a series of structures throughout a river basin, and on the freshwater ecosystem. This limited understanding compromises our ability to develop effective mitigation measures based on sound science, or to conduct the cost-benefit analyses necessary to balance the advantages of renewable energy developments against their potential impacts on fish populations and freshwater communities. In this study, the migration behaviour of European eel (Anguilla anguilla) was studied by means of acoustic telemetry in relation to an in-river hydropower station in the River Frome. The results of this study can provide information that will form the basis for advice on the impacts of small in-river hydropower schemes on migratory species. Scope Themes: Fisheries > Fish stocks/catches/taggings Keywords: Marine/Coastal, Fresh water, Brackish water, Acoustic telemetry, Acoustic Telemetry, Tracking, Pisces Temporal coverage 1 October 2014 - 31 January 2015 Quasi continuous (< 1 min.) Taxonomic coverage Pisces [WoRMS] Contributors Related datasets Parent dataset: European Tracking Network (ETN) data, more Dataset status: Completed Data type: Data Data origin: Research: field survey Metadatarecord created: 2020-01-28 Information last updated: 2023-05-22 |