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Widespread and strong impacts of river fragmentation by anthropogenic barriers on fishes in the Mekong River Basin

Sun, Jingrui; Baldan, Damiano; Lucas, Martyn C.; Wang, Jie; Rodeles, Amaia A.; Galib, Shams M.; Tao, Juan; Li, Mingbo; He, Daming; Ding, Chengzhi

Widespread and strong impacts of river fragmentation by anthropogenic barriers on fishes in the Mekong River Basin Thumbnail


Authors

Jingrui Sun

Damiano Baldan

Jie Wang

Amaia A. Rodeles

Shams M. Galib

Juan Tao

Mingbo Li

Daming He

Chengzhi Ding



Abstract

The Mekong River, a global freshwater biodiversity hotspot, has suffered from intensive barrier construction, resulting in major challenges in safeguarding its fauna. Here, we provide a comprehensive evaluation of the impacts of river barriers on the distribution of 952 fish species in the Mekong River Basin. Our analysis revealed that 93% of Mekong fish species analysed suffer from habitat fragmentation, and species with larger habitat range requirements experienced higher river fragmentation impacts. Sub-basins along the main channel in the Lower Mekong had high values of species richness but relatively high barrier impacts. Across all migration types, freshwater-resident migratory (potamodromous) fishes were affected by the greatest levels of habitat fragmentation (Fragmentation Index, 42.45 [95% confidence interval, 38.61–46.62]). Among all International Union for Conservation of Nature conservation status categories, Critically Endangered species experienced the highest habitat fragmentation index (34.48 [19.46–53.52]). Among all barrier types in the Mekong, small dams and sluice gates contributed more to habitat fragmentation than large dams. While the effects of existing individual large dams on habitat fragmentation and fish distribution in the Mekong Basin are greater than for small barriers, the cumulative impacts of small barriers are greater; hence, basin-wide connectivity planning is needed for more effective conservation.

Citation

Sun, J., Baldan, D., Lucas, M. C., Wang, J., Rodeles, A. A., Galib, S. M., Tao, J., Li, M., He, D., & Ding, C. (2025). Widespread and strong impacts of river fragmentation by anthropogenic barriers on fishes in the Mekong River Basin. Communications Earth & Environment, 6, Article 534. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02467-y

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 10, 2025
Online Publication Date Jul 7, 2025
Publication Date Jul 7, 2025
Deposit Date Jul 8, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jul 8, 2025
Journal Communications Earth & Environment
Electronic ISSN 2662-4435
Publisher Nature Research
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 6
Article Number 534
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02467-y
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4256487

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