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The impact of dams on the river connectivity of the two largest river basins in China
  • Yujun Yi,
  • Yanning Gao,
  • Shanghong Zhang
Yujun Yi
Beijing Normal University

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Yanning Gao
Beijing Normal University
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Shanghong Zhang
North China Electric Power University
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Abstract

Dams are built on rivers to make effective use of, inter alia, water resources, flood protection, and power generation. The construction of dams has greatly promoted the economy and social development, but also reduced the connectivity of rivers, which leads to the weakening of the exchange of material and biological organisms between rivers. The connectivity of rivers directly determines the self-purification and pollution capacity of water bodies, and the migration possibility of fish, which are all important indexes for quantifying the ecological health in basins. In this study, the connectivity of the two largest river basins in China, the Yangtze River and Yellow River Basins, was investigated. The Dendritic Connectivity Index (DCI) was applied to evaluate the impact on river connectivity of dams with a reservoir capacity of larger than 100 million m3. The results show that river connectivity decreased as dam construction increased. The connectivity of the Yangtze River Basin was good in the 1980s, but declined significantly after the Gezhouba Dam was constructed on the mainstream. The changes in the connectivity indexes of potadromous fish (DCIp) and diadromous fish (DCId) were determined for the period of 1980–2010. In the Yangtze River Basin, the DCIp decreased by 58% (from 81.25 to 34.16) and the DCId decreased by 53% (from 89.98 to 42.30). In the Yellow River Basin, the DCIp decreased by 38% (from 51.46 to 31.81) and the DCId decreased by 60% (from 32.74 to 13.00). In both basins, dams on the mainstream are the main cause of the decline in the DCI, dams located on the middle reaches are the main cause of the decline in the DCIp, and dams located on the lower reaches close to the estuary are the main cause of the decline in the DCId.