How do changes in flow magnitude due to hydropower operations affect fish abundance and biomass in temperate regions? A systematic review.

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2022-02-04 DOI:10.1186/s13750-021-00254-8
Meagan Harper, Trina Rytwinski, Jessica J Taylor, Joseph R Bennett, Karen E Smokorowski, Julian D Olden, Keith D Clarke, Tom Pratt, Neil Fisher, Alf Leake, Steven J Cooke
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Altering the natural flow regime, an essential component of healthy fluvial systems, through hydropower operations has the potential to negatively impact freshwater fish populations. Establishing improved management of flow regimes requires better understanding of how fish respond to altered flow components, such as flow magnitude. Based on the results of a recent systematic map on the impacts of flow regime changes on direct outcomes of freshwater or estuarine fish productivity, evidence clusters on fish abundance and biomass responses were identified for full systematic review. The primary goal of this systematic review is to address one of those evidence clusters, with the following research question: how do changes in flow magnitude due to hydropower operations affect fish abundance and biomass?

Methods: This review follows the guidelines of the Collaboration for Environmental Evidence. It examined commercially published and grey literature originally identified during the systematic map process and a systematic search update. All articles were screened using an a priori eligibility criteria at two stages (title and abstract, and full-text) and consistency checks were performed at all stages. All eligible articles were assessed for study validity and specifically designed data extraction and study validity tools were used. A narrative synthesis included all available evidence and meta-analysis using the standardized mean difference (Hedges' g) was conducted where appropriate.

Review findings: A total of 133 studies from 103 articles were included in this systematic review for data extraction and critical appraisal. Most studies were from North America (60%) and were conducted at 146 different hydropower dams/facilities. Meta-analysis included 268 datasets from 58 studies, separated into three analyses based on replication type [temporal (within or between year replication) or spatial]. Fish abundance (226 datasets) and biomass (30 datasets) had variable responses to changes in flow magnitude with estimated overall mean effect sizes ranging from positive to negative and varying by study design and taxa. In studies with temporal replication, we found a detectable effect of alterations to the direction of flow magnitude, the presence of other flow components, sampling methods, season, and fish life stage. However, we found no detectable effect of these moderators for studies with spatial replication. Taxonomic analyses indicated variable responses to changes in flow magnitude and a bias towards salmonid species.

Conclusions: This synthesis did not find consistent patterns in fish abundance or biomass responses to alterations or changes in flow magnitude. Fish responses to flow magnitude alterations or changes were highly variable and context dependent. Our synthesis suggests that biotic responses may not be generalizable across systems impacted by hydroelectric power production and operations, where specific features of the system may be highly influential. Site-specific and adaptive management may be necessary. To improve study validity and interpretability, studies with long-term continuous monitoring, and both temporal and spatial replication are needed. When this gold standard is unfeasible, studies should strive, at minimum, to maximize replication within both intervention and comparator groups for either temporal or spatial designs. To further address knowledge gaps, studies are needed that focus on non-salmonids, multiple seasons, and systems outside of North America.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13750-021-00254-8.

水电运行导致的流量变化如何影响温带地区鱼类的丰度和生物量?系统综述。
背景:通过水力发电改变自然水流机制(健康河川系统的重要组成部分)有可能对淡水鱼类种群造成负面影响。要建立更好的水流管理机制,就必须更好地了解鱼类是如何对改变的水流成分(如水流大小)做出反应的。根据最近关于水流机制变化对淡水或河口鱼类生产力直接结果影响的系统图结果,确定了鱼类丰度和生物量反应的证据集群,以便进行全面的系统审查。本系统综述的主要目标是针对其中一个证据集群,研究问题如下:水电运行导致的流量变化如何影响鱼类丰度和生物量?本综述遵循环境证据合作组织(Collaboration for Environmental Evidence)的指导方针。它研究了在系统地图过程中最初确定的商业出版文献和灰色文献,并对系统检索进行了更新。所有文章均在两个阶段(标题和摘要以及全文)采用先验资格标准进行筛选,并在所有阶段进行一致性检查。对所有符合条件的文章进行了研究有效性评估,并使用了专门设计的数据提取和研究有效性工具。叙述性综述包括所有可用证据,并酌情使用标准化平均差(Hedges'g)进行荟萃分析:本次系统性综述共纳入了 103 篇文章中的 133 项研究,并进行了数据提取和批判性评估。大多数研究来自北美(60%),在 146 个不同的水电站大坝/设施中进行。元分析包括来自 58 项研究的 268 个数据集,根据复制类型[时间(年内或年际复制)或空间]分为三种分析。鱼类丰度(226 个数据集)和生物量(30 个数据集)对流量大小变化的反应各不相同,估计的总体平均效应大小从正到负不等,并因研究设计和分类群而异。在具有时间重复性的研究中,我们发现水流大小方向的改变、其他水流成分的存在、取样方法、季节和鱼类的生命阶段都会产生可检测到的影响。然而,在空间复制研究中,我们没有发现这些调节因素的影响。分类分析表明,鱼类对水流大小变化的反应各不相同,且偏向于鲑科鱼类:本综述未发现鱼类丰度或生物量对水流大小改变或变化的一致响应模式。鱼类对水流大小改变或变化的反应变化很大,且取决于具体情况。我们的综合分析表明,生物反应可能无法在受水电生产和运营影响的系统中普遍适用,因为系统的具体特征可能具有很大的影响力。可能需要针对具体地点进行适应性管理。为了提高研究的有效性和可解释性,需要进行长期连续监测研究,并在时间和空间上进行复制。当这一黄金标准不可行时,研究至少应努力在干预组和比较组内最大限度地复制时间或空间设计。为进一步填补知识空白,需要对非鲑科鱼类、多季节和北美以外的系统进行研究:在线版本包含补充材料,可查阅 10.1186/s13750-021-00254-8。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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