Authors
Taylor Maavara, Christopher T Parsons, Christine Ridenour, Severin Stojanovic, Hans H Dürr, Helen R Powley, Philippe Van Cappellen
Publication date
2015/12/22
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
112
Issue
51
Pages
15603-15608
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
More than 70,000 large dams have been built worldwide. With growing water stress and demand for energy, this number will continue to increase in the foreseeable future. Damming greatly modifies the ecological functioning of river systems. In particular, dam reservoirs sequester nutrient elements and, hence, reduce downstream transfer of nutrients to floodplains, lakes, wetlands, and coastal marine environments. Here, we quantify the global impact of dams on the riverine fluxes and speciation of the limiting nutrient phosphorus (P), using a mechanistic modeling approach that accounts for the in-reservoir biogeochemical transformations of P. According to the model calculations, the mass of total P (TP) trapped in reservoirs nearly doubled between 1970 and 2000, reaching 42 Gmol y−1, or 12% of the global river TP load in 2000. Because of the current surge in dam building, we project that by 2030, about 17% of …
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Scholar articles
T Maavara, CT Parsons, C Ridenour, S Stojanovic… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015