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      Analyzing the Impacts of Dams on Riparian Ecosystems: A Review of Research Strategies and Their Relevance to the Snake River Through Hells Canyon

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          Abstract

          River damming provides a dominant human impact on river environments worldwide, and while local impacts of reservoir flooding are immediate, subsequent ecological impacts downstream can be extensive. In this article, we assess seven research strategies for analyzing the impacts of dams and river flow regulation on riparian ecosystems. These include spatial comparisons of (1) upstream versus downstream reaches, (2) progressive downstream patterns, or (3) the dammed river versus an adjacent free-flowing or differently regulated river(s). Temporal comparisons consider (4) pre- versus post-dam, or (5) sequential post-dam conditions. However, spatial comparisons are complicated by the fact that dams are not randomly located, and temporal comparisons are commonly limited by sparse historic information. As a result, comparative approaches are often correlative and vulnerable to confounding factors. To complement these analyses, (6) flow or sediment modifications can be implemented to test causal associations. Finally, (7) process-based modeling represents a predictive approach incorporating hydrogeomorphic processes and their biological consequences. In a case study of Hells Canyon, the upstream versus downstream comparison is confounded by a dramatic geomorphic transition. Comparison of the multiple reaches below the dams should be useful, and the comparison of Snake River with the adjacent free-flowing Salmon River may provide the strongest spatial comparison. A pre- versus post-dam comparison would provide the most direct study approach, but pre-dam information is limited to historic reports and archival photographs. We conclude that multiple study approaches are essential to provide confident interpretations of ecological impacts downstream from dams, and propose a comprehensive study for Hells Canyon that integrates multiple research strategies.

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          The Natural Flow Regime

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            Adaptation to natural flow regimes.

            Floods and droughts are important features of most running water ecosystems, but the alteration of natural flow regimes by recent human activities, such as dam building, raises questions related to both evolution and conservation. Among organisms inhabiting running waters, what adaptations exist for surviving floods and droughts? How will the alteration of the frequency, timing and duration of flow extremes affect flood- and drought-adapted organisms? How rapidly can populations evolve in response to altered flow regimes? Here, we identify three modes of adaptation (life history, behavioral and morphological) that plants and animals use to survive floods and/or droughts. The mode of adaptation that an organism has determines its vulnerability to different kinds of flow regime alteration. The rate of evolution in response to flow regime alteration remains an open question. Because humans have now altered the flow regimes of most rivers and many streams, understanding the link between fitness and flow regime is crucial for the effective management and restoration of running water ecosystems.
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              On Beyond BACI: Sampling Designs that Might Reliably Detect Environmental Disturbances

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                403-329-2327 , 403-329-2242 , rood@uleth.ca
                Journal
                Environ Manage
                Environmental Management
                Springer-Verlag (New York )
                0364-152X
                1432-1009
                28 November 2007
                February 2008
                : 41
                : 2
                : 267-281
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844 USA
                [2 ]Department of Biological Sciences, University of Lethbridge, T1K 3M4 Lethbridge, AB Canada
                [3 ]CH2M HILL, Boise, ID USA
                Article
                9048
                10.1007/s00267-007-9048-4
                2233706
                18043964
                65e885a1-0d8a-4f02-bff6-9ab789dac43e
                © The Author(s) 2007
                History
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2008

                Environmental management, Policy & Planning
                river damming,environmental impact analysis,riparian ecology

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