Ecological attributes of a tropical river basin vulnerable to the impacts of clustered hydropower developments

The Vu Gia - Thu Bon River Basin in central Vietnam is subject to extensive hydropower development, with eight major and at least 34 minor hydropower installations planned for completion over the next 10 years. This intense clustering of hydropower developments has the potential to impact on aquatic...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMarine and freshwater research Vol. 59; no. 11; pp. 971 - 986
Main Authors Sheaves, Marcus, Duc, Nguyen Huu, Khoa, Nguyen Xuan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Collingwood, Victoria: CSIRO Publishing 01.01.2008
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Summary:The Vu Gia - Thu Bon River Basin in central Vietnam is subject to extensive hydropower development, with eight major and at least 34 minor hydropower installations planned for completion over the next 10 years. This intense clustering of hydropower developments has the potential to impact on aquatic fauna and ecosystems extensively. We sampled freshwater and estuarine fish across the river basin to evaluate the current status of the fish fauna, to determine the extent of zonal and habitat specialisation, to determine the prevalence of migration as a component of life-history strategies, to evaluate the likely magnitude of impacts, and to highlight areas where management intervention is needed and where more extensive study is most urgently required. Given the current high levels of exploitation, the fish fauna appeared surprisingly intact; however, a number of attributes of the fauna, such as the prevalence of migration as a life-history tactic, make this fauna particularly vulnerable to the impacts of hydropower development. Without extensive mitigation, the combinations of habitat alteration in dam and diversion areas and the imposition of a proliferation of barriers to migration will lead to severe population fragmentation, increasing the potential for local extinction, and severely compromise opportunities for recolonisation.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/MF08029
ISSN:1323-1650
1448-6059
DOI:10.1071/MF08029