Effects of Rapid Thermal Cycling (Cold Shock) on Fish Health: Evidence from Controlled Laboratory Experiments, Behavior, and Telemetry

Author:

Schoenfuss Heiko L.1ORCID,Roos John D.1,Loes Tim G.1,Schmidt Brian E.1,Bartell Stephen E.12

Affiliation:

1. Aquatic Toxicology Laboratory, St. Cloud State University, St Cloud, MN 56301, USA

2. Normandale Community College, Bloomington, MN 55431, USA

Abstract

Powerplants frequently use river water for cooling, subsequently discharging warm effluent. Some of these plants can cycle on and off rapidly based on electricity demand, resulting in dramatic temperature fluctuations in the receiving waters. To understand the impacts on resident fish populations in the Upper Mississippi River, we (i) assessed the effects of rapid water cooling on three native fish species; (ii) investigated whether smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) behavior favored movement into thermal plumes when given a choice of cooler or ambient water; and (iii) tracked native M. dolomieu with acoustic tags and recorded core body temperature during the thermal cycling process of a steam electric powerplant. In cold shock experiments, mortality was associated with rapid temperature declines and dependent on the final (cold) holding temperature. The species or developmental stage of the tested organism did not affect survival. When given a choice between warm and ambient waters, M. dolomieu exhibited little inclination to acclimate to the warmer water and instead “self-regulated” by moving in and out of the warm water plume. This finding was supported by telemetry data on M. dolomieu. The core temperature of the fish never increased more than 2 °C above the ambient (upstream) Mississippi River temperature, even during warm effluent discharge.

Funder

Xcel Energy

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

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