**The title, authors, and abstract for this completion report are
provided below. For a copy of the completion report, please contact the
author at njohnson@usgs.gov or via
telephone at 989-734-4768. Questions?
Contact the GLFC
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Field
tests of the NEPTUN low-voltage dc fish-guidance system to block adult lamprey
migration and to guide lamprey into portable traps
Nicholas S.
Johnson2, Piotr Parasiewicz3,
Jason McHugh3, Mariusz Malinowski4,
Sabina Zioła4
2 USGS, Great Lakes Science Center, Hammond
Bay Biological Station, 11188 Ray Road, Millersburg, MI 49759
3 Fishways
Global, LLC, 19849 Middlebelt Road Livonia, MI 48152
4 PROCOM SYSTEM S.A. ul.
Krakowska 17a 50-424 Wrocław,
Poland.
December 2012
Abstract
Sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) invaded the upper Laurentian Great Lakes and
triggered fishery collapse and ecosystem dysfunction. Development of new technologies to limit sea
lamprey access to spawning habitat and enhance trapping is a priority. We tested the hypothesis that adult sea
lamprey would exhibit behavioral avoidance to graduated vertical fields of
pulsed direct current (DC) and that the electric field would not injure or kill
non-target fish. Laboratory and
in-stream experiments coupling behavioral observation and telemetry techniques
demonstrated that graduated vertical fields of pulsed DC can block sea lamprey
migration and direct sea lamprey into traps.
Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and white sucker (Catostomus
commersoni), species that migrate sympatrically
with sea lamprey, avoided the electric field and had minimal injuries when
subjected to it. Vertical fields
of pulsed DC (electrodes vertical in water column) offer several advantages for
fish guidance compared to traditional horizontal fields (electrodes across
bottom): 1) a vertical electric field has virtually no depth limitation during
flood events, 2) vertical electrodes can be quickly deployed without
significant stream modification, and 3) a vertical electric field does not
transfer electricity into the ground, reducing power consumption to the point
where remote deployments powered by solar, wind, hydro, or a small generator
are feasible. Our findings may advance
the application of this technology for blocking or trapping other invasive fish
or reducing entrainment of valued fishes at hydropower facilities.