University of Lisbon, School of Agriculture, Forest Research Centre, Tapada da Ajuda, 1349-017 Lisbon, Portugal.
University of Lisbon, School of Agriculture, Forest Research Centre, Tapada da Ajuda, 1349-017 Lisbon, Portugal.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Mar 20;761:143293. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.143293. Epub 2020 Nov 3.
River longitudinal connectivity is crucial for diadromous fish species to reproduce and grow, its fragmentation by large dams may prevent these species to complete their life cycle. This work aims to evaluate the impact of large dams on the structural longitudinal connectivity at the European scale, from a Diadromous fish species perspective, since the beginning of the 20 century until the early 21 century. Based on large dam locations and completion year, a multitude of river impairment metrics were calculated at three spatial scales for six European oceanic regions and 12 time periods. The number of basins affected by large dams is overall low (0.4%), but for large river basins, that cover 78% of Europe's area, 69.5% of all basins, 55.4% of the sub-basins and 68.4% of river length are impaired. River network connectivity impairment became increasingly significant during the second half of the 20 century and is nowadays spatially widespread across Europe. Except for the North Atlantic, all oceanic regions have over 50% of impacted river length. Considering large river basins, the Mediterranean (95.2%) and West Atlantic (84.6%) regions are the most affected, while the Black (92.1%) and Caspian (96.0%) regions stand out as those with most compromised river length. In 60 years, Europe has gone from reduced impairment to over two-thirds of its large rivers with structural connectivity problems due to large dams. The number of such barriers increased significantly in the second half of the 20 century, especially main stem dams with decreasing distance to the river mouth. Currently, the structural longitudinal connectivity of European river networks is severely impacted. This concerns all regions considered, and those in southern Europe will face even higher challenges, given that this will be a future hot spot for hydropower development and predictably more affected by climate change.
河流纵向连通性对洄游鱼类的繁殖和生长至关重要,而大坝的建设会导致其破碎化,从而阻止这些鱼类完成其生命周期。本研究旨在评估自 20 世纪初至 21 世纪初,从洄游鱼类物种的角度来看,大型水坝对欧洲尺度结构纵向连通性的影响。基于大坝的位置和建成年份,在三个空间尺度上计算了多种河流受损指标,涵盖了欧洲的六个海洋区域和 12 个时间段。受大型水坝影响的流域数量总体上较少(0.4%),但对于覆盖欧洲面积 78%的大河流域,有 69.5%的流域、55.4%的子流域和 68.4%的河流长度受到了影响。河流网络连通性受损在 20 世纪后半叶变得越来越显著,如今在整个欧洲空间广泛存在。除北大西洋外,所有海洋区域都有超过 50%的受影响河流长度。考虑到大河流域,地中海(95.2%)和西大西洋(84.6%)区域受影响最严重,而黑海(92.1%)和里海(96.0%)区域则是受影响河流长度最长的区域。在 60 年的时间里,欧洲的大型河流由于大坝的建设,其结构连通性问题从轻度受损发展到了超过三分之二。这些障碍的数量在 20 世纪后半叶显著增加,尤其是距离河口较近的干流大坝。目前,欧洲河流网络的结构纵向连通性受到了严重影响。这涉及到所有被考虑的区域,而那些位于南欧的区域将面临更高的挑战,因为这将是未来水电开发的热点地区,并且预计会受到气候变化的更大影响。