Litcius/Paper detail

Editorial: Large-scale dam removal and ecosystem restoration

Rebecca McCaffery, Jeffrey J. Duda, Laura M. Soissons, Jean‐Marc Roussel

2024Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rivers underpin vital ecosystems that support aquatic and terrestrial biodiversity and many ecosystem services, including food, water, culture, and recreation (Dudgeon et al. 2006).After centuries of building dams on rivers across the world, river restoration via dam removal is receiving increased public attention, financial investment, and scientific study because of various issues of regarding dam infrastructure, such as obsolescence, sedimentation, and ecosystem degradation (Duda and Bellmore, 2022;East and Grant, 2023).Most dam removal projects to date have focused on smaller structures, but larger structures > 10 m tall have also started to be removed in increasing numbers.Recent estimates suggest that only a small fraction of all dam removals have been scientifically studied, with most focused on small dams and short time scales (Bellmore et al., 2016).Understanding the outcomes of large dam removal, where case studies are much more limited, depends on sustained research and monitoring efforts aimed at understanding restoration processes over large spatial and temporal scales (Figure 1).The ecological and socio-ecological study of large dam removal represents a new frontier in dam removal research: projects are larger, more recent, and provide an opportunity to understand the complex ecological changes and impacts to humans that occur with these transformative restoration projects.This Research Topic contains a diverse array of large dam removal research studies to synthesize the issues, outcomes, tools, and study designs used to document river and ecosystem responses across physical, biological, and ecological domains.Papers address ecosystem ecology and water quality, diadromous and migratory fish populations, terrestrial ecology, and human systems, exploring dam removal effects and impacts in the first ten years since large dam removal in unique river systems found in North America

Topics & Concepts

Dam removalRestoration ecologyWatershedEcosystemEnvironmental scienceScale (ratio)Aquatic ecosystemEcosystem servicesEnvironmental resource managementEcologyHydrology (agriculture)Water resource managementGeographyGeologySedimentComputer scienceBiologyCartographyGeomorphologyGeotechnical engineeringMachine learningFish Ecology and Management StudiesHydrology and Sediment Transport ProcessesSoil erosion and sediment transport