Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic

Construction of large-scale, hydroelectric tidal power developments in the upper Bay of Fundy is receiving serious consideration. Potential designs involve ebb-generation with 1400- 5300-MW plants using 7.6 m diameter, straight-flow, low-head turbines installed in dams up to 8 km in length. Discharg...

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Main Authors: Dadswell, M J, Rulifson, R A, Daborn, G R
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/496
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spelling ftunivmassamh:oai:scholarworks.umass.edu:fishpassage_journal_articles-1495 2023-05-15T15:32:58+02:00 Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic Dadswell, M J Rulifson, R A Daborn, G R 1986-01-01T08:00:00Z https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/496 unknown ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/496 Journal Articles Atlantic ocean Bay of Fundy hydroelectric tidal power turbines text 1986 ftunivmassamh 2022-01-09T19:36:23Z Construction of large-scale, hydroelectric tidal power developments in the upper Bay of Fundy is receiving serious consideration. Potential designs involve ebb-generation with 1400- 5300-MW plants using 7.6 m diameter, straight-flow, low-head turbines installed in dams up to 8 km in length. Discharge through individual turbines will be 400 m3/second at 50 rev/minute with draft tube velocities of 11.4 m/second. Calculated parameters for these turbines are a water length of 2.26 m, impact velocity of 23.99 m/second, blade tip velocity up to 28.7 m/second and a total pressure flux of 1.7 atm. The existing environment is macrotidal (tide range 11-16 m). Embayments are homogeneous estuaries with extremely turbid water. The intertidal biological community is a salt marsh-mudflat biome. The pelagic zone supports large populations of migratory fishes, particularly the alosids, Alosa sapidissima, A. aestivalis, A. pseudoharengus, and Clupea harengus. Striped bass, spiny dogfish, Atlantic salmon, and Atlantic sturgeon also constitute a significant portion of the fish community. Tagging experiments indicate this region is a northern migration terminus for American shad populations from all Atlantic coast rivers and abundance in an individual tidal basin is about 1.5 million adults during a single tidal cycle. Striped bass and alewife tagged in this region have been taken as far south as North Carolina. Upstream tidal headponds will have reduced tide ranges of 5-6 m and the lower energy will result in stratification of the water column and less turbidity. Increased sedimentation above and below the dams is expected to affect local soft-shell clam fisheries. Tidal barrages may alter fish migration routes and repeated passage through turbines during tide-related movements will cause significant mortality to both fish and marine mammals. Existing knowledge for fish passage design in this environment is inadequate for development of sound mitigation measures. Text Atlantic salmon Northwest Atlantic spiny dogfish University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Low Head ENVELOPE(-58.133,-58.133,-62.150,-62.150)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
op_collection_id ftunivmassamh
language unknown
topic Atlantic ocean
Bay of Fundy
hydroelectric
tidal power
turbines
spellingShingle Atlantic ocean
Bay of Fundy
hydroelectric
tidal power
turbines
Dadswell, M J
Rulifson, R A
Daborn, G R
Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic
topic_facet Atlantic ocean
Bay of Fundy
hydroelectric
tidal power
turbines
description Construction of large-scale, hydroelectric tidal power developments in the upper Bay of Fundy is receiving serious consideration. Potential designs involve ebb-generation with 1400- 5300-MW plants using 7.6 m diameter, straight-flow, low-head turbines installed in dams up to 8 km in length. Discharge through individual turbines will be 400 m3/second at 50 rev/minute with draft tube velocities of 11.4 m/second. Calculated parameters for these turbines are a water length of 2.26 m, impact velocity of 23.99 m/second, blade tip velocity up to 28.7 m/second and a total pressure flux of 1.7 atm. The existing environment is macrotidal (tide range 11-16 m). Embayments are homogeneous estuaries with extremely turbid water. The intertidal biological community is a salt marsh-mudflat biome. The pelagic zone supports large populations of migratory fishes, particularly the alosids, Alosa sapidissima, A. aestivalis, A. pseudoharengus, and Clupea harengus. Striped bass, spiny dogfish, Atlantic salmon, and Atlantic sturgeon also constitute a significant portion of the fish community. Tagging experiments indicate this region is a northern migration terminus for American shad populations from all Atlantic coast rivers and abundance in an individual tidal basin is about 1.5 million adults during a single tidal cycle. Striped bass and alewife tagged in this region have been taken as far south as North Carolina. Upstream tidal headponds will have reduced tide ranges of 5-6 m and the lower energy will result in stratification of the water column and less turbidity. Increased sedimentation above and below the dams is expected to affect local soft-shell clam fisheries. Tidal barrages may alter fish migration routes and repeated passage through turbines during tide-related movements will cause significant mortality to both fish and marine mammals. Existing knowledge for fish passage design in this environment is inadequate for development of sound mitigation measures.
format Text
author Dadswell, M J
Rulifson, R A
Daborn, G R
author_facet Dadswell, M J
Rulifson, R A
Daborn, G R
author_sort Dadswell, M J
title Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic
title_short Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic
title_full Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic
title_fullStr Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Potential Impact of Large-Scale Tidal Power Developments in the Upper Bay of Fundy on Fisheries Resources of the Northwest Atlantic
title_sort potential impact of large-scale tidal power developments in the upper bay of fundy on fisheries resources of the northwest atlantic
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 1986
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/496
long_lat ENVELOPE(-58.133,-58.133,-62.150,-62.150)
geographic Low Head
geographic_facet Low Head
genre Atlantic salmon
Northwest Atlantic
spiny dogfish
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Northwest Atlantic
spiny dogfish
op_source Journal Articles
op_relation https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/496
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