I Stopped a Fish Kill Today.

By ERIC P. ORFF, wildlife biologist                                                      
110 River Rd., Epsom, NH 03234                                                 
 
Tuesday, October 16, 2001, 08:45 AM- Suncook, NH 

I arrived at the lower dam on the Suncook River this Tuesday morning to check on the downstream migration of literally millions of river herring or alewives.  There has been an ongoing effort for nearly a decade to restore alewives to the Merrimack River, and the Suncook River has played a pivotal role in this restoration effort. 

Historically alewives swam up the Merrimack River and its major tributaries by the untold millions each spring to spawn in the quiet waters of the lakes forming its headwaters. The adult alewives after living in the sea for two to three years, and growing to ten to twelve inches long, make a made dash up the rivers to lay as many as 200,000 eggs per female.

Native Americans caught multitudes of alewives with nets all along the Merrimack River system. They also constructed special fish traps, called weirs, that were set along the rivers. Weirs Beach on Lake Winnipesaukee retains in name only the significance of a time lost. The runs of alewives were lost as well beginning with the construction of dams along the tributaries.

On the Suncook River, in what was to become Allenstown and Pembroke, and locally known as Suncook, the first dam was constructed in the early 1700s. The waterpower served a local grist and sawmill. In 1848, a huge dam was constructed across the Merrimack River in Lawrence Massachusetts seemingly forever altering the upstream migration of fish. Within two or three years the tremendous annual migration of Atlantic salmon, American Shad and alewives were lost. 

However all was not lost, for efforts have been underway for over three decades to restore shad and salmon to the Merrimack. Although the salmon restoration has been met with limited success, the shad restoration has been very successful. Over 76,000 shad were passed over the fish passage facility at the dam in Lawrence in the spring of 2001.  

Alewife restoration efforts had taken a back seat to the more noteworthy game species, salmon and shad. A restoration effort was finally begun in 1994. New Hampshire Fish and Game fisheries ecologist, Bill Ingham initiated the effort by transporting 200 adult alewives from the Cocheco River in Dover to Northwood Lake in Northwood.

According to my diary the fish were released about 2:00 PM. on April 24th 1994 as I accompanied Bill. I have had a life long interest in the Merrimack River since I grew up in Londonderry and often fished the local brooks for trout until they entered what was then the open sewer of the Merrimack. I have lived on a bluff overlooking the Suncook River in Epsom since 1979 and have taken a keen interest in it as well.

Although alewives are not considered a game fish, they provide a tremendous forage base for nearly all the other larger fish. From the lakes where they are spawned and grow down through the river system as they migrate, and especially out in the sea, alewives are providing nourishment to others.

Each year some of the most productive fishing for striped bass occurs in the lower Merrimack as these giants follow the migrating alewives into the river. I watched three river otters indulge themselves in a school of juvenile alewives above the Northwood Lake dam on October 2nd. The return of alewives would help bring the entire system back into balance. 

Since 1996, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service fisheries staff have stepped up the transfer of fish from the coast, stocking several thousand adult alewives in to the two major tributaries of the Suncook River, Northwood Lake and Suncook Lake in Barnstead. Thanks to this effort, several million eggs hatch each spring in these lakes and by September millions of juvenile alewives are nervously awaiting their trip down the river and out to sea. The hordes of fish (huge schools often can be seen by late September at the dams) are released to migrate down stream when the dam boards are removed each fall to lower the lake levels for the winter. 

The dam boards were lowered at Northwood Lake on October 6th. Because of the huge numbers of fish that have raced out of the lake in past years when the dam boards were pulled, this year the public was invited to watch. A newly formed conservation group The Friends of the Suncook River hosted the "Million Minnow March" that rainy Saturday in anticipation of the spectacle. About 70 people crowded around the dam to stare at the torrent of water leaving the lake once the boards were removed. But fish being fish, they swam their merry way and elected not to join the festival. Residents, who lived on the lake, and came to watch, have marveled all summer long at the huge schools of minnows swarming along the shore.

The migration began four days later on October 10th. By Thursday, the 11th, a few speedy alewives were well down the river and were passing the two hydro stations on the lower Suncook at Pembroke hydro and the China Mill hydro station. Because of the low flows in the river these plants had not been operating. It is the lowering of the lakes above which sends a torrent of water and juvenile alewives down river that also enables the hydro stations to begin to generate electric power; sometimes a deadly combination.  

By Friday afternoon the migration was well underway. I enjoyed an unusually warm mid October evening on the banks of the Suncook at a cookout at a neighbors picnic spot at the river's edge. As far as I could see up and down the river, for over a hundred yards in either direction, the characteristic dimpling of the surface by juvenile alewives could be seen. We all marveled at the sight for the remaining hour or two before dark. Even then, when I took a strong flashlight and cast its beam on to the river I witnessed the stampede continue into the night. 

The next afternoon I stopped by the China Mill dam to watch the fish tumble over a bypass gate near the intake of the hydro station. The turbines remained still and hundreds upon hundreds of little silver streaks were swept over the spillway and were quickly carried down and deposited not 100 yards from the Merrimack River. I watched the race downstream for nearly an hour. At one point I counted about 300 fish a minute going over the falls. Most of the water was still spilling over the main dam so just a fraction of the fish was sweeping by my eyes. It was still a marvelous sight to witness. After all 2,000 adult alewives were placed in Northwood Lake on May 5th. Potentially 5,000,000 to 10,000,000 (million) juvenile alewives were descending the river as I watched! 

This brings me back to Tuesday morning, October 16th, 08:45 am: As I approached the hydro station I could see that the operators were now generating electricity as the current was rushing into the power canal that delivers the water to the huge intakes to the turbines, now whirling away. But my heart sank as I noticed that the bypass was not opened AND right in front of the intake grill two large schools of juvenile alewives were swarming. I quickly made my way around the canal and a second glance at the water showed it devoid of fish. They had been swept into the intake's powerful grasp. 

I quickly made my way around the back of the huge brick factory that has stood here for over 150 years drawing its strength for the river itself. It is no easy task to get to the discharge end of the hydro station. You must fight through a jungle of growth, slip through and under a portion of the fence where the river has eaten its foundation, and then traverse the narrow corridor separating the factory and the river. Even this stretch is a challenge. I fought my way along the banking and sprinted past the two pipes three stories over my head spewing steam and fabric debris out their snouts like angry dragons. It was obvious that sometimes a great volume of scalding steam and debris is discharge on to the path I had selected.  

At the tailrace of the hydro I saw what I expected to seefish dying by the hundreds. Some fluttered a fruitless and vain attempt to swim with their torn bodies in the swift current. The bottom of the discharge canal was littered with the silver glimmering bodies of those that had succumbed to the turbines minutes before. Most fluttered by in a steady stream holding on to their last minutes of life. Some were just bits and pieces being swept along and tumbling in the current at the bottom of the canal. I saw no survivors. 

His was the same bleak image that I had seen before in fact, in 1996. That year, while on the opposite side of the Merrimack River from where the Suncook River enters, I noticed a huge swarm of gulls diving and feeding. I drove over for a closer look and discovered a massive fish kill. Perhaps millions, as the whole bottom of the Suncook River and well out in to the Merrimack were littered with dead alewives. There were no gulls here so very likely this fish kill had just started. There was far less death this time, but clearly thousands of once vibrant little silver-sided baby alewives were strewn down the river in a scene of mass carnage

I quickly made my way back around the old mill building and was fortunate to meet the hydro operator as I arrived back at the intake. "You're chopping up the fish" I exclaimed. He quickly shouted to another fellow to run it and shut it down. At 9:02 the intake pipe belched back its last gasp of leaves and young fish. The fish kill was over! 

The hydro operators at this site and the one up river have agreed to bypass as many fish as possible. Usually water is allowed to go past the intakes and many of the fish can continue downstream unharmed. This operator said that he had been watching for fish and regularly checking the canal. However a school of fish did manage to slide down to the intake unnoticed. Both this and the next upstream hydro facility, the Pembroke Hydro Station are under new ownership and they feel very strongly that all the fish should be allowed downstream unharmed. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists have been working with them to minimize fish losses by recommending flow bypasses and other diversion plans. The hydro operators have greatly reduced their generator capacity by slowing down the turbines so the fish are not sucked into the intakes and then the fish can be directed over the dams by allowing a significant amount of water to bypass the intake and carry the fish away.  

Progress is being made but there is much that remains to be done to restore the Suncook and Merrimack Rivers.The Friends of The Suncook River hope to be a part of a solution to fish losses that are plaguing the restoration efforts of alewives to the Merrimack River system. They can be contacted at suncook@worldpath.net

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