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River fragmentation and barrier impacts on fishes have been greatly underestimated in the upper Mekong River

Sun, J.; Du, W.; Lucas, M.C.; Ding, C.; Chen, J.; Tao, J.; He, D.

River fragmentation and barrier impacts on fishes have been greatly underestimated in the upper Mekong River Thumbnail


Authors

J. Sun

W. Du

C. Ding

J. Chen

J. Tao

D. He



Abstract

River barriers reduce river connectivity and lead to fragmentation of fish habitats, which can result in decline or even extinction of aquatic biota, including fish populations. In the Mekong basin, previous studies have mainly focused on the impacts of large dams but ignored the impacts of small-scale barriers, or drew conclusions from incomplete barrier databases, potentially leading to research biases. To test the completeness of existing databases and to evaluate the catchment-scale fragmentation level, a detailed investigation of river barriers for the whole Upper Mekong (Lancang catchment) was performed, by conducting visual interpretation of high-resolution remotely sensed images. Then, a complete catchment-scale barrier database was created for the first time. By comparing our barrier database with existing databases, this study indicates that 93.7% of river barriers were absent from the existing database, including 75% of dams and 99.5% of small barriers. Barrier density and dendritic connectivity index (DCID and DCIP) were used to measure channel fragmentation within the catchment. Overall, 50.5% of sub-catchments contained river barriers. The Middle region is the most fragmented area within the Lancang catchment, with a median [quartiles] barrier density of 5.34 [0.70–9.67] per 100 km, DCIP value of 49.50 [21.50–90.00] and DCID value of 38.50 [9.00–92.25]. Furthermore, since 2010, distribution ranges of two representative fish species Schizothorax lissolabiatus (a rheophilic cyprinid) and Bagarius yarrelli (a large catfish) have reduced by 19.2% and 32.8% respectively, probably due in part to the construction of river barriers. Our findings indicate that small-scale barriers, in particular weirs and also small dams are the main reason for habitat fragmentation in the Lancang and must be considered alongside large dams in water management and biodiversity conservation within the Mekong.

Citation

Sun, J., Du, W., Lucas, M., Ding, C., Chen, J., Tao, J., & He, D. (2023). River fragmentation and barrier impacts on fishes have been greatly underestimated in the upper Mekong River. Journal of Environmental Management, 327, Article 116871. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116817

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 14, 2022
Online Publication Date Nov 29, 2022
Publication Date Feb 1, 2023
Deposit Date Jan 12, 2023
Publicly Available Date Nov 30, 2023
Journal Journal of Environmental Management
Print ISSN 0301-4797
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 327
Article Number 116871
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116817
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1183616

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