“…Some successes have been reported (Barrett & Mallen-Cooper, 2006;Baumgartner, Zampatti, Jones, Stuart, & Mallen-Cooper, 2014;Parsley et al, 2007), especially at sites where solutions were specifically developed to meet target species and hydrology. But the precarious conservation status of native population reduction of migratory species in South America (Agostinho, Gomes, Fernandes, & Suzuki, 2002;Agostinho, Gomes, & Latini, 2004), and the disrupted river connectivity throughout Africa (Jewitt, Goodman, Erasmus, O'Connor, & Witkowski, 2015;Nel et al, 2007;Wasserman, Weyl, & Strydom, 2011) and Asia (Dudgeon, 2005), clearly indicates that these strategies cannot be applied everywhere. Understanding the reason of this failure is critical, as the world's most biodiverse river basins (the Amazon, Congo, and Mekong) are experiencing an unprecedented boom in construction of hydropower dams (Winemiller et al, 2016), and their effects on biodiversity and fisheries are potentially enormous.…”