4.6 Review

Emerging threats and persistent conservation challenges for freshwater biodiversity

Journal

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 94, Issue 3, Pages 849-873

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12480

Keywords

climate change; endangered species; lakes; management; mitigation; restoration; rivers; streams; stressors; wetlands

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. United States Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture
  3. David and Lucile Packard Foundation
  4. National Science Foundation
  5. Niwot Ridge LTER Program
  6. Stephen A. Jarislowsky Foundation
  7. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Duress
  8. EU MARS projects under the 7th Framework Programme
  9. Canada Research Chairs program

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In the 12 years since Dudgeon et al. (2006) reviewed major pressures on freshwater ecosystems, the biodiversity crisis in the world's lakes, reservoirs, rivers, streams and wetlands has deepened. While lakes, reservoirs and rivers cover only 2.3% of the Earth's surface, these ecosystems host at least 9.5% of the Earth's described animal species. Furthermore, using the World Wide Fund for Nature's Living Planet Index, freshwater population declines (83% between 1970 and 2014) continue to outpace contemporaneous declines in marine or terrestrial systems. The Anthropocene has brought multiple new and varied threats that disproportionately impact freshwater systems. We document 12 emerging threats to freshwater biodiversity that are either entirely new since 2006 or have since intensified: (i) changing climates; (ii) e-commerce and invasions; (iii) infectious diseases; (iv) harmful algal blooms; (v) expanding hydropower; (vi) emerging contaminants; (vii) engineered nanomaterials; (viii) microplastic pollution; (ix) light and noise; (x) freshwater salinisation; (xi) declining calcium; and (xii) cumulative stressors. Effects are evidenced for amphibians, fishes, invertebrates, microbes, plants, turtles and waterbirds, with potential for ecosystem-level changes through bottom-up and top-down processes. In our highly uncertain future, the net effects of these threats raise serious concerns for freshwater ecosystems. However, we also highlight opportunities for conservation gains as a result of novel management tools (e.g. environmental flows, environmental DNA) and specific conservation-oriented actions (e.g. dam removal, habitat protection policies, managed relocation of species) that have been met with varying levels of success. Moving forward, we advocate hybrid approaches that manage fresh waters as crucial ecosystems for human life support as well as essential hotspots of biodiversity and ecological function. Efforts to reverse global trends in freshwater degradation now depend on bridging an immense gap between the aspirations of conservation biologists and the accelerating rate of species endangerment.

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