Daily fluctuating flows affect riparian plant species distributions from local to regional scales

Applied Vegetation Science
By:  and 

Links

Abstract

Aims

The number of hydropower dams has grown globally over recent decades, with significant impacts on downstream riparian plant communities. Many of these dams generate daily fluctuating flows known as hydropeaking to meet sub-daily variation in energy demands. Hydropeaking can significantly impact riparian plant communities, with obligate riparian species tending to experience the greatest negative effects on habitat suitability. Whether this pattern holds in arid biomes where daily soil moisture enhancements could benefit some plants is an open question.

Location

Colorado River, Grand Canyon, Western USA.

Methods

We used occurrence records to model species responses to variation in daily flow fluctuations across 32 689 river segments in the Western United States. We then applied estimates of hydropeaking responses derived from those models to understanding the abundance and fine scale hydrologic niches of riparian plant species in the Colorado River ecosystem downstream of Glen Canyon Dam, which has experienced vegetation expansion attributed to river regulation, including hydropeaking that began in 1964.

Results

At the regional scale, species with greater wetland dependence exhibited increasingly negative responses to hydropeaking across 1 496 species, consistent with previous studies at smaller scales. At the local scale of the Colorado River, we found that species inhabiting near-channel habitat characterized by daily inundation and exposure had positive modeled responses to hydropeaking, consistent with a long history of selection for species tolerant of hydropeaking. In contrast, species inhabiting the zone immediately above peak daily river stage had negative modeled responses to hydropeaking, suggesting that they are being excluded from otherwise suitable habitat nearer the channel.

Conclusions

These results demonstrate that hydropeaking can impact species distributions from local to regional scales by excluding obligate wetland species and reducing habitat suitability for some facultative wetland species. These results from an arid river system are consistent with those reported from other biomes.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Daily fluctuating flows affect riparian plant species distributions from local to regional scales
Series title Applied Vegetation Science
DOI 10.1111/avsc.70033
Volume 28
Issue 3
Publication Date July 23, 2025
Year Published 2025
Language English
Publisher Wiley
Contributing office(s) Southwest Biological Science Center
Description e70033, 14 p.
Country United States
State Arizona
Other Geospatial Glen Canyon Dam to Lake Mead
Additional publication details