Optimizing the Removal of Small Artificial Fish Passage Barriers
Abstract
Removing small artificial barriers that hinder upstream migrations of
fish is a major problem in riparian habitat restoration. Because of budgetary
limitations, it is necessary to prioritize barrier removal and repair
decisions. These have usually been based on scoring and ranking procedures,
which, although simple to use, can be very inefficient in terms of increasing
the amount of accessible instream habitat. We develop a novel decision-making
approach, based on integer programming techniques, which optimizes repair
and removal decisions. Results show based on real datasets of barrier
culverts located in Washington State that scoring and ranking is over
25% below the optimum on average and a full 100% below in the worst case,
producing no net habitat gain whatsoever. This is compared to a dynamic
programming method that was able to find optimal solutions in less than
a second, even for problems with up to several hundred variables, and
a heuristic method, which found solutions with less than a 1% average
optimality gap in even less time.
Source: O’Hanley, J., and D. Tomberlin. In press. “Optimizing
the Removal of Small Artificial Fish Passage Barriers.” Environmental
Modeling and Assessment.
For more information, please contact: David.Tomberlin@noaa.gov
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