Wednesday, November 13

UK’s biggest fish pass opens in Nottinghamshire

The Colwick Fish Pass [Photo credit: Jackson Civil Engineering]

Building of the Colwick Fish Pass, at a cost of ₤ 12m, has actually opened the River Trent and its tributaries for coarse and migratory fish, consisting of salmon and trout, along with eels, making more environment available for fish.

After 2 years in building and construction, fish are now able to reach their spawning and feeding premises.

The structure was formally opened recently by Alan Lovell, chair of the Environment Agency.

Steve Lawrie, location environment supervisor at the Environment Agency, stated: “The fish pass supplies a considerable action in bring back the River Trent catchment to its previous magnificence for salmon and other coarse and migratory fish. It likewise consists of an eel pass to assist support the seriously threatened European eel.

We likewise have a public watching platform above the water, with extremely visual analysis boards. They notify and encourage visitors about the regional wildlife around the river, consisting of the fish that are anticipated to utilize the pass.”

The Colwick fish pass is 200 metres long, 6 metres deep and 6.5 metres large. It consists of a two-metre-high automatic radial gate that continuously keeps an eye on the water levels and circulation rates in the River Trent. The pass then opens and closes based upon the varying water levels throughout the year.

The pass is divided into 20 rising chambers into which water streams through narrow slots. Fish of all types can swim upstream to lay their eggs in the gravel riverbeds of the Trent tributaries such as the River Dove and the River Derwent. They will have the ability to go through these slots and rest in the chamber above before continuing.

The decrease of migratory fish in the Trent catchment goes back to the Industrial Revolution, when big dams were developed to open the river for trade. While some fish had the ability to get rid of these barriers not all of them could.

The Environment Agency has a statutory task to keep, enhance and establish migratory and freshwater fisheries as set out in the Environment Act 1995.

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