Logo image
Using physiological tools to unlock barriers to fish passage in freshwater ecosystems: Applications for Wildlife Conservation and Management
Book chapter

Using physiological tools to unlock barriers to fish passage in freshwater ecosystems: Applications for Wildlife Conservation and Management

Rebecca L. Cramp, Essie M. Rodgers, Christopher Myrick, James Sakker and Craig E. Franklin
Conservation Physiology: Applications for Wildlife Conservation and Management, pp.89-107
Oxford University Press
2021

Abstract

swimming performance fishway culverts movement barrier metabolic rate temperature slope remediation
Globally, freshwater fish numbers have declined substantially in part due to anthropogenic structures (e.g. dams) that impede fish movements. The environmental and societal benefits of balancing environmental health with human resource requirements have meant that there is increasingly a concerted effort to remove or remediate barriers to fish passage. However, this is technically, financially, and biologically challenging. Experimental approaches provide a controlled, iterative, integrative, and cost-effective approach to assess the physical, physiological, and behavioural limitations of fish that can be used to provide evidence-backed information to support or develop remediation practices. This chapter explores some of the physiological tools used to measure fish performance in modified environments, and how empirical studies are informing current issues in the management of freshwater fish passage.

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

Metrics

Logo image