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Measuring changes to floodplains after serial damming of the Tocantins River in the eastern Amazon
  • Christine Swanson,
  • Stephanie Bohlman,
  • David Kaplan
Christine Swanson
School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Stephanie Bohlman
School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida
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David Kaplan
University of Florida
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Abstract

Riparian forests are critical ecotones linking aquatic and terrestrial habitats, providing important ecosystem services such as sediment control and nutrient regulation. The function of riparian forest is intimately linked to river hydrology and floodplain dynamics. The Tocantins River in the eastern Amazon currently has 7 mega-dams along its course with 2 more proposed. As these dams alter the hydrology of the river, it is expected that the riparian vegetation will respond to these hydrological alterations. To understand large-scale and cumulative impacts of multiple dams on floodplains of the Tocantins, we quantify the landscape scale changes in floodplain extent, flood timing, and hydroperiod along an approximately 1400 km stretch of the extensively dammed Tocantins River. Because riparian forests are also impacted by other anthropogenic changes, namely climate change and land use change, we developed linear models to examine the impacts of these drivers in addition to dams. We use water level data collected by the Agencia Nacional das Aguas from the 1930s to the present to map floodplains throughout the Tocantins basin. Several years of floodplain data were validated against SAR data. We then compared floodplain maps before and after damming to determine whether significant changes occurred. Preliminary analysis shows that after installation of the Estreito dam, the hydroperiod downstream of the dam increased 7.5 days on average with a standard deviation of 36.5 days. The floodplain also expanded by 177 sq m. throughout the study area between the two time periods analyzed. Expansions of floodplain area and hydroperiod have implications for riparian forest ecology. Riparian trees are adapted to seasonal flooding and exhibit traits which allow them to be waterlogged for long periods of time, while upland vegetation may lack these characteristics. As dams change hydrology in the rivers and surrounding floodplains, less-adapted trees may be impacted by hydrologic alterations.