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Patch-scale habitat dynamics: three metrics to assess ecological impacts of frequent hydropeaking
dc.contributor.author
Batz, Nico
dc.contributor.author
Judes, Clarisse
dc.contributor.author
Vanzo, Davide
dc.contributor.author
Lamouroux, Nicolas
dc.contributor.author
Capra, Herve
dc.contributor.author
Baumgartner, Jan
dc.contributor.author
Berger, Benjamin
dc.contributor.author
Weber, Christine
dc.date.accessioned
2024-11-24T06:42:15Z
dc.date.available
2024-11-24T06:42:15Z
dc.date.issued
2024-11-06
dc.identifier.issn
2470-5357
dc.identifier.other
10.1080/24705357.2024.2426790
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11850/706735
dc.description.abstract
Human activities significantly alter natural river flows, impacting ecosystem functioning and biodiversity worldwide. Hydropeaking, resulting from intermittent on-demand hydropower generation, introduces sub-daily flow fluctuations exceeding natural variability. While the effects of single hydropeaking events are well-studied, the cumulative impacts of frequent hydropeaking requires further exploration. This study aims to develop metrics that captures changes in habitat dynamics at the patch scale (i.e. individual micro-habitats within the habitat mosaic) due to reoccurring hydropeaking. Using hydrodynamic simulations, we introduce three patch-scale metrics to quantify habitat dynamics with high spatial (0.5 m) and temporal (10 min) resolution: (M1) Habitat probability within patches, assessing spatio-temporal diversity of habitats; (M2) Habitat shifts within patches, evaluating habitat persistence for sessile organisms (e.g. vegetation, invertebrates); and (M3) Spatial shifts of habitats, indicating habitat relocation affecting mobile species (e.g. adult fish). Using eight hydro-morphological scenarios representing different levels of anthropogenic modification of flow and morphology, we demonstrate that these metrics effectively quantify changes in habitat dynamics at patch-scale. The results highlight the ecological relevance of these metrics and their potentially utility for river management. By identifying areas susceptible to ecological impacts, these metrics may serve as tools for hydropeaking mitigation, enabling more targeted and spatially explicit habitat management and restoration.
dc.subject
Habitat modelling
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habitat time-series
dc.subject
invertebrate drift
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fish stranding
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river management
dc.subject
flow regulation
dc.title
Patch-scale habitat dynamics: three metrics to assess ecological impacts of frequent hydropeaking
dc.type
Journal Article
ethz.journal.title
Journal of Ecohydraulics
ethz.identifier.wos
ethz.date.deposited
2024-11-24T06:42:22Z
ethz.source
WOS
ethz.rosetta.exportRequired
true
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Journal Article [131903]