Effects of lake water-level alteration on physical habitat and biological assemblages
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Altered lake hydrology is an emerging, widespread threat as changing climate conditions and increasing human water use place greater pressure on water resources. Dam and land use management can significantly alter lake water-level regimes and flow characteristics, which in turn can affect nutrient cycling, physical habitat, and biological assemblages in littoral areas. However, the pathways by which anthropogenic factors affect lake ecological condition through altered lake hydrology may vary across regional settings and are not well understood. We developed a conceptual framework to evaluate hypothesized pathways by which water management-related factors affect lake hydrologic characteristics, physical habitat, and littoral macroinvertebrate assemblages for inland lakes across five ecoregions in the US. We used HydrAP, an index of potential human hydro-alteration characterized by dam and land use attributes, to represent water management-related activities in our model. We found that water management effects differed among ecoregions. In the West, for example, intensive water management was associated with large water-level declines and littoral bottom exposure, leading to degraded littoral habitat and diminished macroinvertebrate assemblage condition. In the Coastal Plains, water management seemed to stabilize water levels, with less adverse effects on littoral habitat and macroinvertebrates assemblages. Understanding these differences will be critical to assess lake condition under global change.