Journal article

Small artificial impoundments have big implications for hydrology and freshwater biodiversity

R Morden, A Horne, NR Bond, R Nathan, JD Olden

Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | Published : 2022

Abstract

Headwater streams are critical for freshwater ecosystems. Global and continental studies consistently show major dams as dominant sources of hydrological stress threatening biodiversity in the world’s major rivers, but cumulative impacts from small artificial impoundments (SAIs) concentrated in headwater streams have rarely been acknowledged. Using the Murray Darling River basin (Australia) and the Arkansas River basin (US) as case studies, we examined the hydrological impacts of SAIs. The extent of their influence is considerable, altering hydrology in 280–380% more waterways as compared to major dams. Hydrological impacts are concentrated in smaller streams (catchment area <100 km2), raisi..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

Y RM was funded by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship and an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (ARC DECRA) award (DE180100550). AH was funded through an ARC DECRA award (DE180100550). We thank L Lowe and C Wiesenfeld for contributing photos.