Abstract

The natural variation of fish presence in high-velocity tidal channels is not well understood. A better understanding of fish use of these areas would aid in predicting fish interactions with marine hydrokinetic (MHK) devices, the effects of which are uncertain but of high concern. To characterize the patterns in fish presence at a tidal energy site in Cobscook Bay, Maine, we examined two years of hydroacoustic data continuously collected at the proposed depth of an MHK turbine with a bottom-mounted, side-looking echosounder. The maximum number of fish counted per hour ranged from hundreds in the early spring to over 1,000 in the fall. Counts varied greatly with tidal and diel cycles in a seasonally changing relationship, likely linked to the seasonally changing fish community of the bay. In the winter and spring, higher hourly counts were generally confined to ebb tides and low slack tides near sunrise and sunset. In summer and fall of each year, the highest fish counts shifted to night and occurred during ebb, low slack, and flood tides. Fish counts were not linked to current speed, and did not decrease as current speed increased, contrary to observations at other tidal power sites. As fish counts may be proportional to the encounter rate of fish with an MHK turbine at the same depth, highly variable counts indicate that the risk to fish is similarly variable. The links between fish presence and environmental cycles at this site will likely be present at other locations with similar environmental forcing, making these observations useful in predicting potential fish interactions at tidal energy sites worldwide.

Highlights

  • Little is known about how fish use areas with fast tidal currents

  • This high-resolution, long-term time series indicated that fish presence was highly variable and strongly linked to multiple environmental cycles, including tidal, diel, and seasonal cycles

  • This is not surprising, given the high-magnitude seasonal changes and tidal forcing at this site, and that fish movements have been linked to such environmental changes in multiple studies

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Summary

Introduction

Little is known about how fish use areas with fast tidal currents. Fish activity levels and movement patterns vary on a wide range of spatial and temporal scales over the course of their lives, often in ways that are species- and life-stage specific [1,2,3]. Many fish movements are related to environmental changes; for example, vertical migrations linked to the diel cycle, tidal movements into the intertidal zone, or seasonal movements on- or off-shore [1, 3]. In the high-velocity channels targeted for tidal energy extraction, underwater conditions change rapidly and fish presence and distribution likely fluctuates with similar magnitude and frequency. There is already well-established evidence of some fish species changing their.

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