Assessment of the impact of dams on aquatic food webs using stable isotopes: Current progress and future challenges
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Fry, Brian
Yan, Keheng
Huang, Juan
Zhao, Qian
O'Mara, Kaitlyn
Li, Feilong
Gao, Wei
Kainz, Martin J
Brett, Michael T
Bunn, Stuart E
Zhang, Yuan
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Abstract
Dams have disrupted natural river systems worldwide and although population and community level effects on aquatic biota have been well documented, food web responses remain poorly understood and difficult to characterize. The application of stable isotope analysis (SIA) provides a means to assess the effect of dams on food webs. Here we review the effect of dams on aquatic food webs using SIA, aiming to detect knowledge gaps in the field of dam impacts on aquatic food webs and propose a conceptual framework to help formulate hypotheses about dam impacts on food webs guided by food web theory. Dams can affect aquatic food webs via two pathways: a bottom-up pathway with altered basal food sources and their transfer to consumers through changes in flow, nutrients, temperature and sediment, and a top-down pathway with consumer species composition altered mainly through habitat fragmentation and related physiochemical changes. Taking these mechanisms into consideration, the impact of dams on food web attributes derived from SIA was evaluated. These studies generally apply mixing models to determine how dams alter the dominant carbon sources supporting food webs, use δ15N to examine how dams alter food-chain length, or use Layman metrics of isotope variability to assess niche changes for invertebrate and fish assemblages. Most studies compare the patterns of SIA metrics spatially (e.g. upstream vs reservoir vs downstream of dams; regulated vs unregulated rivers) and temporally (before vs after dam construction), without explicit hypotheses and/or links to theoretical concepts of food webs. We propose several steps to make SIA studies of dam impacts more rigorous and enhance their potential for producing novel insights. Future studies should quantify the shape and strength of the effect of dams on SIA-measured food web response, be conducted at larger temporal and spatial scales (particularly along the river longitudinal continuum and the lateral connected ecosystems (e.g., floodplains)), and consider effects of dams on food web resilience and tipping points.
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Science of The Total Environment
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Subject
Environmental management
Isotope geochemistry
Bottom-up pathway
Food chain length
Mixing models
Top-down pathway
Trophic diversity
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Guo, F; Fry, B; Yan, K; Huang, J; Zhao, Q; O'Mara, K; Li, F; Gao, W; Kainz, MJ; Brett, MT; Bunn, SE; Zhang, Y, Assessment of the impact of dams on aquatic food webs using stable isotopes: Current progress and future challenges, Science of The Total Environment, 2023, pp. 167097