2021
DOI: 10.1177/19400829211045788
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Understanding Hydropower Impacts on Amazonian Wildlife is Limited by a Lack of Robust Evidence: Results From a Systematic Review

Abstract: Background and Research Aims: Although hydropower provides energy to fuel economic development across Amazonia, strategies to minimize or mitigate impacts in highly biodiverse Amazonian environments remain unclear. The growing number of operational and planned hydroelectrics requires robust scientific evidence to evaluate impacts of these projects on Amazonian vertebrates. Here, we investigated the existing scientific knowledge base documenting impacts of hydropower developments on vertebrates across Brazilian… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Although adverse impacts have been widely suggested, more robust evidence is required to examine the sustainability of the increasing number of dams across Brazilian Amazonia (Tundisi et al, 2014; Rodrigues dos Santos, Michalski & Norris, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although adverse impacts have been widely suggested, more robust evidence is required to examine the sustainability of the increasing number of dams across Brazilian Amazonia (Tundisi et al, 2014; Rodrigues dos Santos, Michalski & Norris, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aquatic species such as freshwater turtles are directly affected by dam construction (Tucker, Guarino & Priest, 2012; Le Duc et al, 2020; Stanford et al, 2020). Although many studies focus on fishes there are few studies that consider the diversity of Amazonian aquatic and semi‐aquatic vertebrates (Rodrigues dos Santos, Michalski & Norris, 2021). Turtles represent some of the largest and most threatened freshwater vertebrates (Stanford et al, 2020; Tickner et al, 2020) and are vulnerable to habitat changes because their life history (Shine & Iverson, 1995) and dependence on environmental factors for embryonic development limit the adaptive response for population recruitment against human impacts (Quintana et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These impacts generate changes not only to biological cycles and species ecological interactions (Latrubesse et al, 2020) but also create drastic alterations to local communities, livelihoods and cultures (Del Bene, Scheidel, & Temper, 2018;Fearnside, 2018). Whilst negative impacts have been widely suggested, more robust evidence is required to examine the sustainability of the increasing number of dams across Brazilian Amazonia (Rodrigues dos Santos, Michalski, & Norris, 2021;Tundisi et al, 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aquatic species, like freshwater turtles are directly impacted by dam construction (Le Duc et al, 2020;Stanford et al, 2020;Tucker, Guarino, & Priest, 2012). Although many studies focus on fishes there are few studies considering the diversity of Amazonian aquatic and semiaquatic vertebrates (Rodrigues dos Santos, Michalski, & Norris, 2021). Turtles represent some of the largest and most threatened freshwater vertebrates (Stanford et al, 2020;Tickner et al, 2020) and are vulnerable to habitat changes because their life history (Shine & Iverson, 1995) and dependence on environmental factors for embryonic development, which limits the adaptive response for population recruitment against anthropic impacts (Quintana et al, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%