Use of 2D acoustic telemetry to study the behaviour of Atlantic salmon smolts (Salmo salar) approaching Poutès dam (Allier River, France). (#126)
Located on the Allier River (France), the largest
upstream tributary of the Loire River which is one of the longest river
system in Europe in which Atlantic salmon (Salmo
salar) spawning migration occurs, the dam of Poutès was the
scene of conflicts for decades. A technical solution, result of the stakeholders
‘conciliation, will lead to an important reconfiguration of the current dam to
meet with the ecological and sedimentary continuity requirements. Part of the
scientific monitoring of this innovative project, a 2D acoustic telemetry
experiment with JSATS AMT (Juvenile Salmon Acoustic Telemetry System Acoustic
Micro Transmitter-Lotek) was conducted in 2014 and 2015 at the Poutès dam. The
first objective was to test this new technology which would allow us to
validate the future bypass efficiency thanks to the study of smolts ‘precise trajectories
approaching the dam. The second objective was to study the behaviour of wild
smolts in an early phase of the downstream migration at almost 900 km from the
ocean. In fact, recent studies using rotary screw traps upstream of Poutès
highlighted early migrations of fishes which were not silver-skinned like
typical smolts. The behaviour of these “early fishes” and specifically their
behaviour close to the bypass has never been studied, the former studies having
always used farmed fishes at a later period. Results suggest that this
technology is powerful and can be very useful to study the attractivity of bypasses.
Moreover, the behaviour of wild smolts was investigated and showed interesting
patterns.