2020
DOI: 10.1002/rra.3588
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Predicted impacts of proposed hydroelectric facilities on fish migration routes upstream from the Pantanal wetland (Brazil)

Abstract: There are 104 hydroelectric facilities proposed to be installed in the watersheds that feed the Pantanal, a vast floodplain wetland located mostly in Brazil. The Pantanal is host to 23 long‐distance migratory fish species that ascend upland tributaries to spawn. A Geographic Information System was used to predict the impact of hydroelectric dams on potential migration routes for these species. Both anthropogenic (hydroelectric dams) and natural barriers were included in the analysis. Natural barriers were iden… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Based on these results as well as our parallel study on nutrient transport (Oliveira et al, in press) and a recent analysis of migratory fish routes in the region (Campos et al, 2020), development of new SHPs on the remaining undammed tributaries to the Pantanal may present serious risks to downstream river and floodplain ecosystems. Although the numerous dams in the northern part of the watershed have only modestly reduced sediment and nutrient transport because many are on rivers with low rates of transport, our modeling indicates that future construction of dams on rivers with higher sediment loads is likely to substantially reduce sediment transport from the uplands to the Pantanal.…”
Section: Recommendations For Future Hydropower Developmentsupporting
confidence: 57%
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“…Based on these results as well as our parallel study on nutrient transport (Oliveira et al, in press) and a recent analysis of migratory fish routes in the region (Campos et al, 2020), development of new SHPs on the remaining undammed tributaries to the Pantanal may present serious risks to downstream river and floodplain ecosystems. Although the numerous dams in the northern part of the watershed have only modestly reduced sediment and nutrient transport because many are on rivers with low rates of transport, our modeling indicates that future construction of dams on rivers with higher sediment loads is likely to substantially reduce sediment transport from the uplands to the Pantanal.…”
Section: Recommendations For Future Hydropower Developmentsupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Decisions about whether and where to construct dams in the Upper Paraguay River basin should consider not only sediment transport but also other environmental and social impacts. Two other kinds of impacts that are particularly important are nutrient transport (Oliveira et al, in press) and river system connectivity for migratory fish (Campos et al, 2020).…”
Section: Recommendations For Future Hydropower Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Effects of new hydropower facilities on downstream nutrient concentrations and transport are one of a number of environmental and social considerations for decisions about whether and where to construct dams in the Upper Paraguay River basin. Effects on sediment transport and fish migrations are two other environmental impacts of paramount importance Campos et al, 2020). Considering concentrations and transport of nutrients together with the parallel study of sediments presented by Fantin-Cruz et al (2020), we argue that new hydropower facilities should not be built on undammed rivers entering the Pantanal that have particularly low nutrient concentrations and transport, as well as on those that have the highest absolute rates of transport to the Pantanal.…”
Section: Recommendations For Future Hydropower Developmentmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Regarding the expansion of the hydroelectric matrix in Brazil and its potential damages, besides the Amazon basin, another location where a large number of dams are planned is the Upper Paraguay river basin, a region that is notable for the Pantanal, a huge wetland ecosystem that is largely dependent on the flow regime of the Paraguay river and its tributaries. In this region, there is a debate about the potential impacts of new dam construction in the highlands (Planalto) on the ecosystems of the lower lying Pantanal (Bergier, 2013;Coelho da Silva et al, 2019;Medinas de Campos et al, 2020). In this context, it is worthwhile to carefully examine the hydrological changes that followed the construction of the major Manso dam, that started operation in 2000 at the headwaters of one of the major tributaries of the Paraguay river.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%