2021
DOI: 10.3390/su13052805
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Safeguarding Free-Flowing Rivers: The Global Extent of Free-Flowing Rivers in Protected Areas

Abstract: Approximately one-third of long rivers remain free-flowing, and rivers face a range of ongoing and future threats. In response, there is a heightened call for actions to reverse the freshwater biodiversity crisis, including through formal global targets for protection. The Aichi Biodiversity Targets called for the protection of 17% of inland water areas by 2020. Here, we examine the levels and spatial patterns of protection for a specific type of inland water area—rivers designated as free-flowing. Out of a gl… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
(67 reference statements)
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“…In the Amazon, at least half of the standing forests are inside formally protected areas (RAISG 2020) and the protection and consolidation of these territories as sustainable drivers of conservation is the first step to support human-nature well-being and the Basin ecosystem integrity. Nonetheless, these areas were not initially designed to protect river systems, indicating a need for redesign and expansion (Opperman et al 2021). Rivers frequently serve as boundaries of protected areas, and often, only tracts of them are located within the protected area.…”
Section: Expand Consolidate and Secure Protected Areasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Amazon, at least half of the standing forests are inside formally protected areas (RAISG 2020) and the protection and consolidation of these territories as sustainable drivers of conservation is the first step to support human-nature well-being and the Basin ecosystem integrity. Nonetheless, these areas were not initially designed to protect river systems, indicating a need for redesign and expansion (Opperman et al 2021). Rivers frequently serve as boundaries of protected areas, and often, only tracts of them are located within the protected area.…”
Section: Expand Consolidate and Secure Protected Areasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have provided a benchmark of the current situation, but more research is needed for the habitat conservation planning of other aquatic groups (e.g., benthic invertebrates; Crespo-Pérez et al 2020) and for supporting species' upward migration in mountains due to increasing warming or the new habitats that have been opened up by glacier retreat (Milner et al 2008, Seimon et al 2017. Regarding river connectivity, future studies on the protection of free-flowing rivers by PAs across the Andean-Amazon region could provide relevant information about fluvial connectivity, conservation of river ecological function and ecosystem services provision (Opperman et al 2021). Furthermore, we evidenced how glacier coverages have been protected by PAs as they represent important water sources in the region.…”
Section: Pas Aquatic Biodiversity and Ecosystem Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some activities that are necessary to allow the realization of all the potential uses of the rivers have irreversible impacts. Dams for hydropower production, for instance, cause huge and hardly reversible impacts in the area of the dam reservoir (Opperman et al 2021 ; European Commission 2018 ).…”
Section: Ethical Issues Regarding Joint Management Of Shared River Basins In the Context Of Climate Change And Water Scarcitymentioning
confidence: 99%