Damming Amazon Rivers: Environmental impacts of hydroelectric dams on Brazil's Madeira River according to local fishers' perception

Ambio. 2020 Oct;49(10):1612-1628. doi: 10.1007/s13280-020-01316-w. Epub 2020 Jan 29.

Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the environmental impacts generated by the hydroelectric complex in the Madeira River, Brazilian Amazon, based on the perceptions of local fishers and fishery database, it focus attention on three main impacts: (i) on local fishery stocks; (ii) in fish fauna and (iii) on the aquatic ecosystems. The local fishers were selected through the "snowball" approach for the application of semi-structured interviews. All the local fishers confirmed having perceived a decline in fishery productivity following the impounding of the Madeira River. Changes in the condition of the fish were also perceived by the local fishers, including exophthalmia (82%), a reduction in the weight or length of the fish (25%), and irregular breeding patterns (14%). In the case of impacts on the river, changes in the hydrological cycle were the process remembered most frequently (75%). The results elucidated a range of environmental impacts caused by the hydroelectric dams of the Madeira River.

Keywords: Anthropogenic disturbance; Artisanal fishers; Ethnobiology; Human ecology; Reservoirs; Riverside communities.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Brazil
  • Ecosystem*
  • Fisheries
  • Fishes
  • Rivers*