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Rising water temperature in rivers: Ecological impacts and future resilience

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posted on 2025-03-04, 10:07 authored by Matthew F. Johnson, Lindsey K. Albertson, Adam C. Algar, Stephen J. Dugdale, Patrick Edwards, Judy England, Christopher Gibbins, So Kazama, Daisuke Komori, Andrew D. C. MacColl, Eric A. Scholl, Robert WilbyRobert Wilby, Fabio de Oliveira Roque, Paul WoodPaul Wood

Rising water temperatures in rivers due to climate change are already having observable impacts on river ecosystems. Warming water has both direct and indirect impacts on aquatic life, and further aggravates pervasive issues such as eutrophication, pollution, and the spread of disease. Animals can survive higher temperatures through physiological and/or genetic acclimation, behavioral and phenological change, and range shifts to more suitable locations. As such, those animals that are adapted to cool-water regions typically found in high altitudes and latitudes where there are fewer dispersal opportunities are most at risk of future extinction. However, sub-lethal impacts on animal physiology and phenology, body-size, and trophic interactions could have significant population-level effects elsewhere. Rivers are vulnerable to warming because historic management has typically left them exposed to solar radiation through the removal of riparian shade, and hydrologically disconnected longitudinally, laterally, and vertically. The resilience of riverine ecosystems is also limited by anthropogenic simplification of habitats, with implications for the dispersal and resource use of resident organisms. Due to the complex indirect impacts of warming on ecosystems, and the species-specific physiological and behavioral response of organisms to warming, predicting how river ecosystems will change in the future is challenging. Restoring rivers to provide connectivity and heterogeneity of conditions would provide resilience to a range of expected co-occurring pressures, including warming, and should be considered a priority as part of global strategies for climate adaptation and mitigation.

Funding

Environment Agency. Grant Number: SC200008

Royal Society. Grant Number: IEC\R3\213074

History

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Published in

WIREs Water

Volume

11

Issue

4

Publisher

Wiley Periodicals LLC

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited

Acceptance date

2024-02-05

Publication date

2024-03-05

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

2049-1948

eISSN

2049-1948

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Paul Wood. Deposit date: 19 August 2024

Article number

e1724

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