Sep 252013
 

Original story at Business Spectator

Australia’s native fish could stand a better chance of survival when passing through hydropower turbines in major waterways thanks to an innovative mechanical chamber developed at UNSW.

A 17 day old Murray Cod showing evidence of injury (bubble in gut) resulting from rapid pressure changes.

A 17 day old Murray Cod showing evidence of injury (bubble in gut) resulting from rapid pressure changes.

When native fish migrate downstream they often pass through hydropower turbines and weirs. If they evade impact with the blades, fish can still suffer injury and even death due to extreme and rapid pressure changes when they go from deepwater upstream to shallower waters.

These pressure injuries, which include expanded swim bladders, are similar to the expansion injuries scuba divers might experience when surfacing too quickly. They are known as “barotrauma”.

“The pressure change these fish experience is like going from 10 metres below the water to the height of Mount Everest in about half a second,” says Mr Brett Miller, principal engineer and inventor from the UNSW Water Research Laboratory.

Miller and the team at the Water Research Laboratory have developed a pair of custom hydraulic “barochambers” that can simulate these rapid pressure changes. These will measure the decompression limit that fish can safely endure and guide the design of more environmentally and fish friendly water infrastructure.

Mini hydropower generators throughout the Murray Darling provide renewable energy to regional communities, but Miller says more research is needed on the potential risk of these generators on native fish populations.

“Fish welfare at river infrastructure is a problem in Australia and globally,” says Miller. “Safe passage needs to be considered at the construction and approval phases of hydropower infrastructure, and not as an afterthought.”

“This system allows us to measure fish mortality and injury against decompression rates,” he says.

Researchers at the NSW Department of Primary Industries Fisheries are currently using the mobile chambers, which feature a large glass window to observe the fish and an easy-to-use operating system that doesn’t require specialist knowledge.

The invention was a finalist for a 2013 Engineers Australia Excellence Award for innovation.

The project was co-funded by the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage, the NSW Department of Primary Industries (Fisheries) and the Australian Centre for Renewable Energy’s Emerging Renewables Program. This funding was administered through grants to Waratah Power.

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