Title
A baseline for assessing the ecological integrity of Western Amazon rivers
Date Issued
01 December 2025
Access level
open access
Resource Type
Controlled Vocabulary for Resource Type Genres::texto::revista::artículo::artículo original
Author(s)
Anderson E.P.
Encalada A.C.
Couto T.B.A.
Couto T.B.A.
Beveridge C.F.
Herrera-R G.A.
Heilpern S.A.
Heilpern S.A.
Almeida R.M.
Cañas-Alva C.
Correa S.B.
de Souza L.S.
Duponchelle F.
Garcia-Davila C.
Goulding M.
López-Casas S.
Maldonado-Ocampo J.A.
Miranda-Chumacero G.
Montoya M.
Piland N.C.
Victoria-Lacy L.
Varese M.
Varese M.
Jenkins C.N.
Jenkins C.N.
Florida International University
Universidad San Francisco de Quito
Florida International University
Lancaster Environment Centre
Florida International University
The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Cornell University
Stanford University
Indiana University Bloomington
St. Johns River Water Management District
College of Forest Resources
Field Museum of Natural History
Université de Montpellier
Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonía Peruana
Wildlife Conservation Society
Andes
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
Wildlife Conservation Society Bolivia
Wildlife Conservation Society - Peru
Florida International University
Florida International University
Wildlife Conservation Society - Peru
Amazon Waters Alliance
Florida International University
Florida International University
Abstract
Amazon freshwater systems influence global hydroclimatic patterns, host unparalleled biological diversity, and support unique social-ecological systems. Rivers of the Western Amazon underpin this global importance with an outsized, underrecognized role at the Amazon Basin scale. Here we examined the status of several components—hydrology, sediments, freshwater fish biodiversity, and longitudinal river connectivity—that support the ecological integrity of Western Amazon rivers and their linkage to the greater Amazon Basin. Streamflow is largely driven by precipitation and the region supplies nearly all sediments delivered by the Amazon River to the Atlantic Ocean. The Western Amazon harbors 74% of the ichthyofauna of the entire Amazon Basin. Existing dams and road crossings have disrupted longitudinal river connectivity on several rivers. We estimated that 47.8 million people reside in the Amazon Basin, with more than half (58%) inhabiting the Western Amazon. This study helps establish a baseline for tracking change in Western Amazon river ecosystems.
Volume
6
Issue
1
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-105012594645
Source
Communications Earth and Environment
ISSN of the container
26624435
Sources of information:
Scopus
Directorio de Producción Científica