Literature DB >> 35175810

Reducing adverse impacts of Amazon hydropower expansion.

Alexander S Flecker1, Qinru Shi2, Rafael M Almeida1,3, Héctor Angarita4,5,6, Jonathan M Gomes-Selman7, Roosevelt García-Villacorta1,8, Suresh A Sethi3, Steven A Thomas9, N LeRoy Poff10,11, Bruce R Forsberg12,13, Sebastian A Heilpern3,14, Stephen K Hamilton15,16, Jorge D Abad17, Elizabeth P Anderson18, Nathan Barros19, Isabel Carolina Bernal20, Richard Bernstein2,21, Carlos M Cañas22, Olivier Dangles23, Andrea C Encalada24, Ayan S Fleischmann25, Michael Goulding26, Jonathan Higgins27, Céline Jézéquel28, Erin I Larson1,29, Peter B McIntyre3, John M Melack30, Mariana Montoya22, Thierry Oberdorff28, Rodrigo Paiva25, Guillaume Perez2, Brendan H Rappazzo2,21, Scott Steinschneider31, Sandra Torres32,33, Mariana Varese22, M Todd Walter31, Xiaojian Wu2, Yexiang Xue2,21,34, Xavier E Zapata-Ríos32,33, Carla P Gomes2,21.   

Abstract

Proposed hydropower dams at more than 350 sites throughout the Amazon require strategic evaluation of trade-offs between the numerous ecosystem services provided by Earth's largest and most biodiverse river basin. These services are spatially variable, hence collective impacts of newly built dams depend strongly on their configuration. We use multiobjective optimization to identify portfolios of sites that simultaneously minimize impacts on river flow, river connectivity, sediment transport, fish diversity, and greenhouse gas emissions while achieving energy production goals. We find that uncoordinated, dam-by-dam hydropower expansion has resulted in forgone ecosystem service benefits. Minimizing further damage from hydropower development requires considering diverse environmental impacts across the entire basin, as well as cooperation among Amazonian nations. Our findings offer a transferable model for the evaluation of hydropower expansion in transboundary basins.

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 35175810     DOI: 10.1126/science.abj4017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


  1 in total

1.  Biodiversity underpins fisheries resilience to exploitation in the Amazon river basin.

Authors:  Sebastian A Heilpern; Suresh A Sethi; Ronaldo B Barthem; Vandick da Silva Batista; Carolina R C Doria; Fabrice Duponchelle; Aurea García Vasquez; Michael Goulding; Victoria Isaac; Shahid Naeem; Alexander S Flecker
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2022-06-08       Impact factor: 5.530

  1 in total

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