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Over 200,000 kilometers of free-flowing river habitat in Europe is altered due to impoundments

Over 200,000 kilometers of free-flowing river habitat in Europe is altered due to impoundments
Over 200,000 kilometers of free-flowing river habitat in Europe is altered due to impoundments

European rivers are disconnected by more than one million man-made barriers that physically limit aquatic species migration and contribute to modification of freshwater habitats. Here, a Conceptual Habitat Alteration Model for Ponding is developed to aid in evaluating the effects of impoundments on fish habitats. Fish communities present in rivers with low human impact and their broad environmental settings enable classification of European rivers into 15 macrohabitat types. These classifications, together with the estimated fish sensitivity to alteration of their habitat are used for assessing the impacts of six main barrier types (dams, weirs, sluices, culverts, fords, and ramps). Our results indicate that over 200,000 km or 10% of previously free-flowing river habitat has been altered due to impoundments. Although they appear less frequently, dams, weirs and sluices cause much more habitat alteration than the other types. Their impact is regionally diverse, which is a function of barrier height, type and density, as well as biogeographical location. This work allows us to foresee what potential environmental gain or loss can be expected with planned barrier management actions in rivers, and to prioritize management actions.

Humans, Animals, Rivers, Ecosystem, Fresh Water, Europe, Models, Theoretical, Fishes
2041-1723
Parasiewicz, Piotr
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Belka, Kamila
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Łapińska, Małgorzata
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Ławniczak, Karol
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Prus, Paweł
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Adamczyk, Mikołaj
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Buras, Paweł
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Szlakowski, Jacek
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Kaczkowski, Zbigniew
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Krauze, Kinga
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O'Keeffe, Joanna
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Suska, Katarzyna
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Ligięza, Janusz
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Melcher, Andreas
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O'Hanley, Jesse
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Birnie-Gauvin, Kim
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Aarestrup, Kim
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Jones, Peter E
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Jones, Joshua
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Garcia de Leaniz, Carlos
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Tummers, Jeroen S
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Consuegra, Sofia
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Kemp, Paul
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Schwedhelm, Hannah
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Popek, Zbigniew
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Segura, Gilles
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Vallesi, Sergio
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Zalewski, Maciej
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et al.
Parasiewicz, Piotr
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Belka, Kamila
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Łapińska, Małgorzata
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Ławniczak, Karol
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Prus, Paweł
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Adamczyk, Mikołaj
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Buras, Paweł
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Szlakowski, Jacek
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Kaczkowski, Zbigniew
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Krauze, Kinga
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O'Keeffe, Joanna
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Suska, Katarzyna
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Ligięza, Janusz
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Melcher, Andreas
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O'Hanley, Jesse
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Birnie-Gauvin, Kim
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Aarestrup, Kim
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Jones, Peter E
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Jones, Joshua
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Garcia de Leaniz, Carlos
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Tummers, Jeroen S
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Consuegra, Sofia
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Kemp, Paul
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Schwedhelm, Hannah
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Popek, Zbigniew
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Segura, Gilles
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Vallesi, Sergio
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Zalewski, Maciej
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Wiśniewolski, Wiesław
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Parasiewicz, Piotr, Belka, Kamila and Łapińska, Małgorzata , et al. (2023) Over 200,000 kilometers of free-flowing river habitat in Europe is altered due to impoundments. Nature Communications, 14 (1), [6289]. (doi:10.1038/s41467-023-40922-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

European rivers are disconnected by more than one million man-made barriers that physically limit aquatic species migration and contribute to modification of freshwater habitats. Here, a Conceptual Habitat Alteration Model for Ponding is developed to aid in evaluating the effects of impoundments on fish habitats. Fish communities present in rivers with low human impact and their broad environmental settings enable classification of European rivers into 15 macrohabitat types. These classifications, together with the estimated fish sensitivity to alteration of their habitat are used for assessing the impacts of six main barrier types (dams, weirs, sluices, culverts, fords, and ramps). Our results indicate that over 200,000 km or 10% of previously free-flowing river habitat has been altered due to impoundments. Although they appear less frequently, dams, weirs and sluices cause much more habitat alteration than the other types. Their impact is regionally diverse, which is a function of barrier height, type and density, as well as biogeographical location. This work allows us to foresee what potential environmental gain or loss can be expected with planned barrier management actions in rivers, and to prioritize management actions.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 August 2023
Published date: 9 October 2023
Keywords: Humans, Animals, Rivers, Ecosystem, Fresh Water, Europe, Models, Theoretical, Fishes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506200
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506200
ISSN: 2041-1723
PURE UUID: 884a2a1a-9aba-4880-aac0-6f52aa4b6315
ORCID for Paul Kemp: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4470-0589

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Date deposited: 30 Oct 2025 17:34
Last modified: 31 Oct 2025 02:38

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Contributors

Author: Piotr Parasiewicz
Author: Kamila Belka
Author: Małgorzata Łapińska
Author: Karol Ławniczak
Author: Paweł Prus
Author: Mikołaj Adamczyk
Author: Paweł Buras
Author: Jacek Szlakowski
Author: Zbigniew Kaczkowski
Author: Kinga Krauze
Author: Joanna O'Keeffe
Author: Katarzyna Suska
Author: Janusz Ligięza
Author: Andreas Melcher
Author: Jesse O'Hanley
Author: Kim Birnie-Gauvin
Author: Kim Aarestrup
Author: Peter E Jones
Author: Joshua Jones
Author: Carlos Garcia de Leaniz
Author: Jeroen S Tummers
Author: Sofia Consuegra
Author: Paul Kemp ORCID iD
Author: Hannah Schwedhelm
Author: Zbigniew Popek
Author: Gilles Segura
Author: Sergio Vallesi
Author: Maciej Zalewski
Author: Wiesław Wiśniewolski
Corporate Author: et al.

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