Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years

Abstract Dams disrupt river networks by interrupting longitudinal transport of sediment and nutrients and obstructing the movement of aquatic organisms. Increasingly, water resource managers are looking for dam removal as a solution to restore connectivity and improve aquatic habitats, water quality...

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Main Authors: Jeremy Dietrich, Alison Rickard, Suresh A. Sethi, Scott Cuppett, Patrick Sullivan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-06-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70323
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author Jeremy Dietrich
Alison Rickard
Suresh A. Sethi
Scott Cuppett
Patrick Sullivan
author_facet Jeremy Dietrich
Alison Rickard
Suresh A. Sethi
Scott Cuppett
Patrick Sullivan
author_sort Jeremy Dietrich
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Dams disrupt river networks by interrupting longitudinal transport of sediment and nutrients and obstructing the movement of aquatic organisms. Increasingly, water resource managers are looking for dam removal as a solution to restore connectivity and improve aquatic habitats, water quality, and fish passage. Empirical studies on small dams (<7.5 m) that incorporate both ecological and geomorphic monitoring over longer time periods (3 year+ post‐removal) are rare, limiting the data available to restoration stakeholders to inform barrier removal prioritization decisions. To help address this gap, we implemented a suite of geomorphic, biological, and water quality monitoring efforts to assess the effect of a small dam (3.7 m) removal project in the Hudson River Estuary watershed, New York State (USA). We monitored the site prior to removal and continued observations for three years post‐removal to assess differences in ecological conditions between the upstream impoundment and downstream tail‐reach before and after dam removal. Instream sediment composition and mean particle size were highly disparate between upstream impoundment and downstream tail‐reach areas prior to the dam removal but became more uniform and of higher habitat quality across the study site within two years after removal. Functional diversity, taxonomic diversity, and taxa richness of the macroinvertebrate community improved dramatically in upstream habitats within one year of the dam removal, and differences between the upstream and downstream reaches disappeared by the third year after removal, suggesting rapid recovery of stream conditions in the previously dammed upstream reach. Upstream aquatic habitat designations improved within two years from being “moderately impacted” to “slightly impacted,” rising above the biological impairment threshold according to New York State's Biological Assessment Profile score. This allowed both New York and the Environmental Protection Agency to document water quality improvements as a Type‐3 nonpoint source success story. Combined, results from this temperate watershed show that dam removals may provide aquatic ecosystem recovery in relatively short time frames.
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spelling doaj-art-038e565721a44ecb8d2dce6f678e9c202025-06-27T06:10:49ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252025-06-01166n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.70323Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three yearsJeremy Dietrich0Alison Rickard1Suresh A. Sethi2Scott Cuppett3Patrick Sullivan4New York State Water Resources Institute at Cornell University Ithaca New York USADepartment of Natural Resources & the Environment Cornell University Ithaca New York USAAquatic Research and Environmental Assessment Center, Brooklyn College Brooklyn New York USANew York State Water Resources Institute at Cornell University Ithaca New York USADepartment of Natural Resources & the Environment Cornell University Ithaca New York USAAbstract Dams disrupt river networks by interrupting longitudinal transport of sediment and nutrients and obstructing the movement of aquatic organisms. Increasingly, water resource managers are looking for dam removal as a solution to restore connectivity and improve aquatic habitats, water quality, and fish passage. Empirical studies on small dams (<7.5 m) that incorporate both ecological and geomorphic monitoring over longer time periods (3 year+ post‐removal) are rare, limiting the data available to restoration stakeholders to inform barrier removal prioritization decisions. To help address this gap, we implemented a suite of geomorphic, biological, and water quality monitoring efforts to assess the effect of a small dam (3.7 m) removal project in the Hudson River Estuary watershed, New York State (USA). We monitored the site prior to removal and continued observations for three years post‐removal to assess differences in ecological conditions between the upstream impoundment and downstream tail‐reach before and after dam removal. Instream sediment composition and mean particle size were highly disparate between upstream impoundment and downstream tail‐reach areas prior to the dam removal but became more uniform and of higher habitat quality across the study site within two years after removal. Functional diversity, taxonomic diversity, and taxa richness of the macroinvertebrate community improved dramatically in upstream habitats within one year of the dam removal, and differences between the upstream and downstream reaches disappeared by the third year after removal, suggesting rapid recovery of stream conditions in the previously dammed upstream reach. Upstream aquatic habitat designations improved within two years from being “moderately impacted” to “slightly impacted,” rising above the biological impairment threshold according to New York State's Biological Assessment Profile score. This allowed both New York and the Environmental Protection Agency to document water quality improvements as a Type‐3 nonpoint source success story. Combined, results from this temperate watershed show that dam removals may provide aquatic ecosystem recovery in relatively short time frames.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70323aquatic connectivityaquatic macroinvertebratesbioindicatorsdam removalstream restorationwater quality
spellingShingle Jeremy Dietrich
Alison Rickard
Suresh A. Sethi
Scott Cuppett
Patrick Sullivan
Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years
Ecosphere
aquatic connectivity
aquatic macroinvertebrates
bioindicators
dam removal
stream restoration
water quality
title Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years
title_full Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years
title_fullStr Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years
title_full_unstemmed Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years
title_short Aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years
title_sort aquatic habitat response to small dam removal demonstrates recovery in three years
topic aquatic connectivity
aquatic macroinvertebrates
bioindicators
dam removal
stream restoration
water quality
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70323
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AT sureshasethi aquatichabitatresponsetosmalldamremovaldemonstratesrecoveryinthreeyears
AT scottcuppett aquatichabitatresponsetosmalldamremovaldemonstratesrecoveryinthreeyears
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