How Fish Survive Hydro Turbines
Summary
TLDRThe video script delves into the intricate balance between the benefits of dams and their environmental impacts, particularly on fish migration and ecosystems. It explores the evolution of dam management, highlighting the collaborative efforts between scientists, engineers, and stakeholders to mitigate adverse effects through innovative technologies and research. The narrative follows the example of McNary Dam, showcasing various fish passage structures, monitoring systems, and ongoing scientific advancements aimed at promoting sustainable hydropower while preserving aquatic life. The script underscores the continuous pursuit of solutions to strike a harmonious equilibrium between human needs and environmental conservation.
Takeaways
- 🌊 Many of the largest dams in the US were built without fully considering their impacts on river ecosystems, but we're now working to balance the benefits of dams (flood control, hydropower, water supply) with environmental protection.
- ⚖️ Finding the right balance between a dam's benefits and its environmental impact is a complex and evolving challenge, but improving science and engineering are helping us strike a better equilibrium.
- 🐟 Dams have extensive infrastructure like fish ladders and bypass systems to help migratory fish travel upstream and downstream with minimal harm, though these facilities were often added later as our understanding improved.
- 🔬 Researchers at places like Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) are constantly advancing the science and technology around fish passage, using tools like sensor fish, acoustic tags, and fish-powered generators.
- 🌊 Dam operations are increasingly governed by detailed Fish Passage Plans developed in collaboration with various partners to prioritize the survival of migratory fish populations alongside human needs.
- 🔩 Improvements like new turbine designs with reduced pressure changes and better surface pathways are being implemented to enhance fish survivability when passing through dams.
- 🐠 Factors like avian predation, pressure changes, and disorientation can pose significant risks to migrating fish near dams, so deterrents and mitigation measures are crucial.
- 🔄 The science and engineering around dam infrastructure and fish passage is an ongoing, iterative process, with constant refinements and adaptations as our understanding evolves.
- 🌉 Balancing the competing interests of energy, water management, and environmental protection is a complex but essential aspect of responsible dam engineering and operation.
- 🤝 Collaboration between engineers, biologists, policymakers, activists, and other stakeholders is vital for achieving sustainable solutions that serve both human needs and ecological preservation.
Q & A
What are some of the major benefits of large dams in the US?
-Some of the major benefits of large dams mentioned in the script include flood control, agriculture, water supply for cities, and hydroelectric power generation.
What is the main environmental cost of dams discussed in the script?
-The main environmental cost discussed is the impact dams have on river ecosystems and migratory fish populations, such as salmon.
What is the name of the dam featured in the video, and where is it located?
-The dam featured in the video is McNary Dam, located across the Columbia River between Oregon and Washington state.
What are some of the key features and facilities of McNary Dam designed to help fish passage?
-Key features include fish ladders, attraction water systems, juvenile bypass systems with submersible screens, collection channels, and release pipes to help both adult and juvenile fish migrate past the dam.
What role does the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) play in improving fish passage at dams?
-PNNL conducts research and develops technologies to improve fish passage and survival at hydroelectric dams, such as sensor fish to evaluate turbine impacts and innovations in turbine design.
How has the management of fish passage at dams like McNary evolved over time?
-The script mentions that many fish passage facilities were not originally part of the dam design, but have been added and improved over time as scientific understanding and regulations have evolved to better balance the impacts on fish with the benefits of the dam.
What is the purpose of the Fish Passage Plan mentioned in the script?
-The 500-page Fish Passage Plan is prepared annually in collaboration with various partners, and it governs the operation of McNary and other dams in the Columbia River system to improve the survival of migratory fish along the river.
What are some of the techniques used by researchers to study and track fish behavior and movement around dams?
-Techniques mentioned include implanting acoustic tags and receivers to track fish like underwater GPS, developing tiny sensors and generators to power them without harming the fish, and studying fish behavior in controlled environments.
How does the script emphasize the importance of collaboration and ongoing research in balancing the needs of hydropower and environmental conservation?
-The script highlights the involvement of various experts, including engineers, biologists, ecologists, policy experts, regulators, and activists, in continuously improving and refining the balance between the benefits of dams and their environmental impacts through research and collaboration.
What is the significance of the salmon pink and blue paint colors used in the McNary Dam powerhouse, according to the script?
-The blue color symbolizes the water that drives the hydropower station, while the pink color symbolizes the life within the water and its environmental, economic, and cultural significance, representing the balancing act at the heart of the dam's operations.
Outlines
🌊 Balancing Dams and River Ecosystems
This paragraph introduces the topic of the video, discussing the benefits and environmental impacts of large dams in the US. It highlights the importance of finding a balance between controlling water resources for human benefit and preserving aquatic ecosystems. The paragraph sets the stage for an exploration of how this balance is being managed and evolved over time through improved science and engineering.
🐟 Fish Passage Facilities at McNary Dam
This paragraph delves into the fish passage facilities at McNary Dam, designed to assist migratory fish in navigating the dam. It explains the workings of fish ladders for upstream migration, including attraction water, entrances, and baffled sections. It also discusses the juvenile bypass system for downstream migration, involving submersible screens, collection channels, and release pipes. The paragraph emphasizes the importance of these structures in improving fish survival rates.
🔬 Advancing Fish Passage Technology
This paragraph focuses on the research and technology advancements happening at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) to improve fish passage through dams. It discusses the use of sensor fish to evaluate turbine impacts, the development of fish-friendly turbine designs, and studies on fish behavior and navigation. The paragraph highlights the collaboration between researchers, engineers, and policymakers to continuously enhance the balance between hydropower and environmental protection.
🚀 Innovative Fish Tracking and Monitoring
This paragraph explores the cutting-edge technologies used by PNNL researchers to track and monitor fish as they interact with dam structures. It covers acoustic tags for precise fish location tracking, miniaturized sensor implants, fish-powered generators, and methods for safe tag insertion. The paragraph emphasizes the importance of studying fish behavior and adapting infrastructure accordingly.
🌟 Promoting Independent Creators on Nebula
This paragraph shifts focus to promote the Nebula streaming platform, which supports independent creators like the video's host. It highlights Nebula's ad-free environment, original content, and the ability for creators to experiment without algorithmic constraints. The paragraph encourages viewers to subscribe to Nebula using a special discount, supporting the future of independent video creation.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Dams
💡Hydroelectric power
💡Fish passage
💡Environmental impacts
💡Research and innovation
💡Migratory fish
💡Fish ladders
💡Juvenile bypass systems
💡Balancing act
💡Stewardship
Highlights
Most of the largest dams in the US were built before we fully understood the impacts they would have on river ecosystems, but they provide immense benefits like flood control, agriculture, water supply, and hydroelectric power.
McNary Dam is a nearly 1.5-mile-long hydroelectric dam across the Columbia River, equipped with 14 power-generating turbines that can generate nearly a gigawatt of power.
The operation of McNary Dam is driven by the Fish Passage Plan, a 500-page document governing the operation to improve the survival of migratory fish like salmon and lampreys.
McNary Dam has fish ladders to help adult salmon swim upstream, with features like attraction water and concrete baffles to facilitate their passage.
For juvenile fish going downstream, McNary has a sophisticated bypass system with submersible screens and a massive collection channel to divert them away from turbines.
The science of improving fish passage at dams is constantly evolving, with researchers at PNNL developing innovative technologies like sensor fish, coatings to reduce buildup, and tiny implantable sensors to track fish behavior.
PNNL has developed minuscule acoustic tags and fish-powered generators to track fish movements without harming them or running out of battery power.
Balancing the benefits of hydropower dams and their environmental impacts, especially on migratory fish populations, is a complex issue that requires collaboration between engineers, biologists, ecologists, policymakers, and activists.
New turbine designs developed in collaboration with PNNL have significantly improved fish survivability when passing through hydropower dams.
The presenter learned about the similarities between how dams can isolate fish populations and how humans adapt to living in remote places, as explored in the Nebula series 'Extremities' by Wendover Productions.
Nebula is a streaming service built by independent creators, offering ad-free original content without interference from industry executives or algorithms.
The presenter's Practical Construction series would not have been possible without the support of Nebula subscribers.
A 40% discount on an annual Nebula subscription is offered, making it an affordable way to support independent creators.
The video highlights the importance of fish passage structures like fish ladders and bypass systems in mitigating the impacts of dams on migratory fish populations.
The video emphasizes the ongoing research and evolution of technologies aimed at improving fish survivability and reducing the environmental impacts of hydropower dams.
Transcripts
Most of the largest dams in the US were built before we really understood the impacts they would
have on river ecosystems. Or at least they were built before we were conscientious enough to weigh
those impacts against the benefits of a dam. And, to be fair, it’s hard to overstate those benefits:
flood control, agriculture, water supply for cities, and hydroelectric power. All of our
lives benefit in some way from this enormous control over Earth’s freshwater resources.
But those benefits come at a cost, and the price isn’t just the dollars we’ve spent on
the infrastructure but also the impacts dams have on the environment. So you have these two vastly
important resources: the control of water to the benefit of humanity and aquatic ecosystems that we
rely on, and in many ways these two are in direct competition with each other. But even though most
of these big dams were built decades ago, the ways we manage that struggle are constantly evolving as
the science and engineering improve. This is a controversial issue with perspectives that
run the gamut. And I don’t think there’s one right answer, but I do know that an informed opinion is
better than an oblivious one. So, I wanted to see for myself how we strike a balance between a dam’s
benefits and environmental impacts, and how that’s changing over time. So, I partnered up with the
folks at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (or PNNL) in Washington state to learn more. Just
to be clear, they didn’t sponsor this video and had no control over its contents.They showed me
so much, not just the incredible technology and research that goes on in their lab, but also how
it is put into practice in real infrastructure in the field, all so I could share it with you.
This is McNary Dam, a nearly 1.5-mile-long hydroelectric dam
across the Columbia River between Oregon and Washington state,
just shy of 300 miles (or 470 km) upriver from the Pacific Ocean. And this is Tim Roberts,
the dam’s Operations Project Manager and the best dam tour guide I’ve ever met.
But this was not just a little walkthrough. We went deep into every part of this facility to
really understand how it works. McNary is one of the hydropower workhorses in the Columbia
River system, a network of dams that provide electricity, irrigation water, flood control,
and navigation to the region. It’s equipped with fourteen power-generating turbines, and these
behemoths can generate nearly a gigawatt of power combined! That means this single facility can,
very generally, power more than half-a-million homes. The powerhouse where those turbines live
is nearly a quarter mile long (more than 350 meters)! It’s pretty hard to convey the scale
of these units in a video, but Tim was gracious enough to take us down inside one to see and
hear the enormous steel shaft spinning as it generates megawatts of electrical power.
All that electricity flows out to the grid on these transmission lines to power the surrounding area.
McNary is a run-of-the-river dam, meaning it doesn’t maintain a large reservoir. It
stores some water in the forebay to create the height needed to run the turbines,
but water flows more or less at the rate it would without the dam. So, any extra water
flowing into the forebay that can’t be used for hydro generation has to be passed downstream
through one or more of these 22 enormous lift gates in the spillway beside the powerhouse.
As you can imagine, all this infrastructure is a lot to operate and maintain. But it’s
not just hydrologic conditions like floods and droughts or human needs like hydropower
demands and irrigation dictating how and when those gates open or when those turbines run;
it’s biological criteria too. The Columbia and its tributaries are home
to a huge population of migratory fish, including chinook, coho, sockeye, pink salmon,
and lampreys, and over the years, through research, legislation, lawsuits, advocacy,
and just plain good sense by the powers at be, we’ve steadily been improving the balance between
impacts to that wildlife and the benefits of the infrastructure. In fact, just about every
aspect of the operation of McNary Dam is driven by the Fish Passage Plan. This 500-page document,
prepared each year in collaboration with a litany of partners, governs the operation of McNary and
several other dams in the Columbia River system to improve the survival of fish along the river.
This fish bible includes prescriptive details and schedules for just about every aspect of the dam,
including the fish passage structures too. Usually, when we build infrastructure,
the people who are going to use it are actual people. But in a very real sense,
huge aspects of McNary and other similar dams are infrastructure for non-humans.
On top of the hydropower plant and the spillway, McNary is equipped with a host of facilities meant to
help wildlife get from one side to the other with as little stress or injury as possible.
Let’s look at the fish ladders first. McNary has two of them, one on each side.
A big contingent of the fish needing past McNary dam are adult salmon and other species from the
ocean trying to get upstream to reproduce in freshwater streams. They are biologically
motivated to swim against the current, so a fish ladder is designed to encourage and allow them
to do just that, and it starts with attraction water. Dams often slow down the flow of water,
both upstream and downstream, which can be disorienting to fish trying to swim against a
current. Also, dams are large, and fish generally don’t read signs, so we need an alternative way to
show them how to get around. Luckily, in addition to a strong current, salmon are
sensitive to the sound and motion of splashing water, so that’s just what we do. At McNary,
huge electric pumps lift water from the tailrace below the dam and discharge it into a channel that
runs along the powerhouse. As the water splashes back down, it draws fish toward the entrances so
they can orient with the flow through the ladder. Some of this was a little tough to understand
even seeing it in person, so I had a couple of the engineers at the dam explain it to me.
All these entrances provide options for the fish to come in, increasing
the opportunity and likelihood that they will find their way.
Once they’re in, they make their way upstream into the ladder itself. Concrete baffles break
up the insurmountable height of the dam into manageable sections that fish can swim up at
their own pace. Most of the fish go through holes in the baffles, but some jump over the
weirs. There’s even a window near the top of the ladder where an expert counts the
fish and identifies their species.
This data is important to a wide variety of organizations,
and it’s even posted online if you want to have a look. Once at the top,
the fish pass through a trash rack that keeps debris out of the ladder and continue their
journey to their spawning grounds. The goal is that they never even know they left the river at all,
and it works. Every year hundreds of thousands of chinook, coho, steelhead, and sockeye make
their way past McNary Dam. If you include the non-native shad, that number is in the millions.
And it’s not just bony fish that find their way through. Some of the latest
updates are to help lamprey passage. These are really interesting creatures!
I’m working on another video that will take a much deeper look at how this and other fish ladders
work, so stay tuned for that one, but it’s not the only fish passage facility here. Because what goes
up, must come down, or at least their offspring do (most adult salmon die after reproducing). So,
McNary Dam needs a way to get those juvenile fish through as well. That might sound simple;
thanks to gravity, it’s much simpler to go down than up. But at a dam, it’s anything but.
I definitely wouldn’t want to pass through one of these,
but juvenile fish can make it through the spillway mostly just fine. In fact,
specialized structures are often installed during peak migration times to encourage
fish to swim through the spillway. McNary Dam has lift gates where the water flows from lower in the
water column. But salmon like to stay relatively close to the surface and they’re sensitive to the
currents in the flow. Many dams on the Columbia system have some way to spill water over the top,
called a weir, that is more conducive to getting the juveniles through the dam.
The other path for juveniles to take is to be drawn toward the turbines. But McNary and a lot
of other dams are equipped with a sophisticated bypass system to divert the fish before they
make it that far. and that all starts with the submersible screens.
These enormous structures are specially designed with lots of narrow slots to let as much water through to the
turbines while excluding juvenile fish. They are lowered into place with the huge gantry crane that
rides along the top of the power house. Each submersible screen is installed in front of a
turbine to redirect fish upwards while the water flows continues on. Brushes keep them clean of
debris to make sure they fish don’t get trapped against the screen. They might look simple,
but even a basic screen like this requires a huge investment of resources and maintenance,
because they are absolutely critical to the operation of the dam.
Once the fish have been diverted by the screens, they flow with some of the water upward into a
massive collection channel. This was originally designed as a way to divert ice and debris,
but now it’s basically a fish cathedral along the upstream face of the dam.
The juveniles come out in these conduits from below. Then they flow along the channel,
while grates along the bottom concentrate them upward. Next they flow into a huge pipe that pops
out on the downstream face of the dam. Along the way, the juveniles pass through electronic readers
that scan any of the fish that have been equipped with tags and then into this maze of pipes and
valves and pumps and flumes. In the past, this facility was used to store juveniles so they
could be loaded up in barges and transported downstream. But over time, the science showed
it was better to just release them downstream from the dam. Every once in a while, some of the
juveniles are separated for counting so scientists can track them just like the adults in the ladder.
Then the juveniles continue their journey in the pipe out to the middle of the river downstream.
Avian predation is a serious problem for juveniles. Pelicans, seagulls,
and cormorants love salmon just like the rest of us. In many cases, most of the fish
mortality caused by dams isn’t the stress of getting them through the various structures,
but simply that birds and other predatory fish take advantage of the fact that dams can slow down and concentrate
migrating fish. This juvenile bypass pipe runs right out into the center
of the downstream channel where flows are fastest to give the fish a fighting chance,
and McNary is equipped with a lot of deterrents to try and keep the birds away.
All this infrastructure at McNary Dam to help fish get upstream and downstream has changed
and evolved over time, and in fact, a lot of it wasn’t even conceived of when the dam was
first built. And that’s one of the most important things I learned touring McNary
Dam and the Pacific Northwest National Lab: the science is constantly improving. A ton of
that science happens here at the PNNL Aquatics Research Laboratory.
I spent an entire day just chatting with all the scientists and researchers here who are advancing the state of the art.
For example, not all the juvenile salmon get diverted away from those turbines.
Some inevitably end up going right through. You might think that being hit by a spinning turbine
is the worst thing that could happen to a fish, but actually the change in pressure is the main
concern. A hydropower turbine’s job is to extract as much energy as possible from the flowing water.
In practice, that means the pressure coming into each unit is much higher than going out,
and that pressure drop happens rapidly. It doesn’t bother the lamprey at all, but that sudden change
in pressure can affect the swim bladder that most fish use for buoyancy. So how do we know
what that does to a fish and how newer designs can be safer? PNNL has developed sensor fish,
electronic analogues to the real thing that they can send through turbines and get data out on the
other side. Compare that data to what we already know about the limits fish can withstand (another
area of research at PNNL), and you can quickly and safely evaluate the impacts a turbine can have.
What’s awesome is seeing how that research translates into actual investments in
infrastructure that have a huge effect on survivability. New turbines recently
installed at Ice Harbor Dam upstream were designed in collaboration with PNNL with
fish passage in mind to reduce injury for any juveniles that find their way in. One
study found that more than 98% of fish survived passing through the new turbines,
and nearly all the large hydropower dams in the Columbia river system are slated to have
them installed in the future. And it’s not just the turbines that are seeing improvements. I
talked to researchers who study live fish, how they navigate different kinds of structures,
and what they can withstand. Just the engineering in the water system to keep these fish happy is
a feat in itself. I talked to a coatings expert about innovative ways to reduce biological buildup
on nets and screens. I talked to an energy researcher about new ways to operate turbines
to decrease impacts to fish from ramping them up and down in response to fluctuating grid demands.
And I spent a lot of time learning about how we track and study the movement of fish as
they interact with human made structures. Researchers at PNNL have developed a suite
of sensors that can be implanted into fish for a variety of purposes. Some use acoustic signals
picked up by nearby receivers that can precisely locate each fish like underwater GPS. Of course,
if you want to study fish behavior accurately, you need the fish to behave like they would naturally,
so those sensors have to be tiny. PNNL has developed miniscule devices, so small I could
barely make out the details. You also want to make sure that inserting the tags doesn’t injure the
fish, so researchers showed me how you do that and make sure they heal quickly. And of course,
those acoustic tags require power, and tiny batteries (while extremely impressive in their
own right) sometimes aren’t enough for long-term studies. So they’ve even come up with fish-powered
generators that can keep the tags running for much longer periods of time. A piezoelectric
device creates power as the fish swims… and they had some fun ways to test them out too.
Of course, migratory fish aren’t the only part of the environment impacted by hydropower,
and with all the competing interests, I don’t think we’ll ever feel like the
issue is fully solved. These are messy, muddy questions that take time, energy,
and big investments in resources to get even the simplest answers.
The salmon pink and blue paint in the powerhouse at McNary really sums it up well, with the blue
symbolizing the water that drives the station, and the pink symbolizing the life within the water,
and its environmental, economic, and cultural significance. This kind of balancing act is really
at the heart of what a lot of engineering is all about. I’m so grateful for the opportunity to see
and learn more about how energy researchers, biologists, ecologists, policy experts,
regulators, activists, and engineers collaborate to make sure we’re being good stewards of the
resources we depend on. I think Alison Colotelo, the Hydropower Program Lead at PNNL put it best:
My crew and I spent two full days in Washington talking to scientists and
engineers about these complicated issues. And I probably learned more about biology
in those two days than anything I happened to absorb in college,
especially about how dams can isolate populations of fish if they aren’t equipped with well-designed
passage systems like those at McNary. And there’s a human equivalent to that too,
that’s really interesting I think, because we’ve found ways of living in super remote places,
and the ways people and fish adapt to those situations have a lot of similarities. My friend,
Sam, of the Wendover Productions channel has a video series called Extremities that is all
about the most remote places on Earth and how and why people choose to settle them. I’ve watched all
15 episodes. They’re so good, and if you want to check them out, they’re available only on Nebula.
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