“…Climate changes are likely to exacerbate conditions in ecological systems already degraded by human activity, particularly aquatic systems, most of which have been anthropogenically degraded (Postel, Daily & Ehrlich, ; Poff et al., ; Postel, ; for example). Increased air temperature (and subsequently water temperature) and altered patterns of precipitation at global and finer spatial scales, with increased variability in both and spatially variable patterns of extreme conditions (Kharin, Zwiers, Zhang & Hegerl, ; Westra, Alexander & Zwiers, ), affect aquatic systems both directly and indirectly (Magnuson et al., ; Kling et al., ; IPCC, ; Christidis, Jones & Stott, ; Mann & Toles, ; Collingsworth et al., ). For example, many rivers are dammed (Tharme, ), limiting connectivity and changing hydrology and thermal regimes, both of which are affected by changes in air temperature and precipitation patterns (Magnuson et al., ).…”