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Dunnville Fishway Project -
Walleye Passage

Bunt,
C.M., S.J. Cooke and R.S. McKinley. 2000. Assessment of
the Dunnville fishway for passage of walleyes from Lake
Erie to the Grand River, Ontario. Journal of Great Lakes
Research 26: 482-488.
Abstract
- A Denil fishway in Dunnville, Ontario was built to
provide upstream passage for walleye Stizostedion
vitreum from Lake Erie to the Grand River. Modest
numbers of walleye have been observed to use this fishway.
Coded radiotelemetry was used to track 24 adult walleye
(12 male, 12 female) downstream from the fishway to
explore reasons for limited use. Activity was monitored by
a fixed array of three antennas within the fishway that
continuously scanned for signals from all radiotagged
fish, and by mobile tracking. In April and May 1997, 17
attempts to use the fishway by radiotagged walleye were
recorded. During this period, the attraction efficiency of
the Dunnville fishway was approximately 21 %. Proportions
of female and male walleyes that attempted to use the
fishway were not significantly different. All attempts
took place in the evening or at night, between 1600 and
0600 hours. Most activity occurred near midnight. Walleye
occupied the first resting pool of the fishway for up to
17 h. Subsurface water velocity during the study was
approximately 2 m/s. Passage rates of radiotagged fish at
the Dunnville fishway were between 0 and 4.2 %. Behaviour
modifying hydraulic conditions including turbulence,
entrained air, backcurrents and whirlpools in fishway
resting areas may delay or prevent successful upstream
passage of walleye. There was also evidence of large scale
movements (up to 9.6 km/d) by fish that may have spawned
in the Grand River below the Dunnville dam.
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