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Use of artificial eggs in studies of washout depth and drift distance for salmonid eggs
Authors:D. T. Crisp
Affiliation:(1) Freshwater Biological Association, The Ferry House, LA22 OLP Ambleside, Cumbria, UK
Abstract:Colour-coded artificial trout eggs were used in investigations of washout depth in a natural stream and of drift distance relative to water velocity in an experimental channel and in a section of natural stream.Washout depth was studied in a spawning riffle of a stream whose bankful discharge is 5.6 m3 s–1. During an experiment when spates never exceeded 6.5 m3 s–1 egg washout was severe at 5 cm depth within the gravel, variable at 10 cm and negligible at 15 cm. During another experiment when a spate of 9.0 m3 s–1 (return period 10–20 years) occurred, washout was severe at 5 and 10 cm depth and variable at 15 cm. There was also evidence that some eggs were moved short distances downstream within the gravel without being washed out.Within experimental channels, drift distance could be predicted from multiple regressions relating logarithms of water velocity, percentage of eggs settled and distance from point of release. At a water velocity of 100 cm s–1 at 0.6 depth, 50% of eggs would settle within 8 m of the point of release. At water velocities of 75 to 100 cm s–1 drifting eggs would, on average, travel at c. 60% of water velocity and make 1 to 2 bed contacts m–1 of travel.A similar multiple regression can be applied to data from a natural stream channel. It predicts much larger drift distances (50% settled in 42 m at 100 cm s –1 ). However, in the natural channel, settlement appears aggregated and the validity of the concept of lsquopermanent settlementrsquo is in doubt.
Keywords:artificial salmonid eggs  washout  drift
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