Abstract

The present dataset contains information about aquatic macroinvertebrates and environmental variables collected before and after the implementation of a small “run-of-river” hydropower plant on the Saldur stream, a glacier-fed stream located in the Italian Central-Eastern Alps. Between 2015 and 2019, with two sampling events per year, we collected and identified 34,836 organisms in 6 sampling sites located within a 6 km stretch of the stream. Given the current boom of the hydropower sector worldwide, and the growing contribution of small hydropower plants to energy production, data here included may represent an important – and long advocated – baseline to assess the effects that these kinds of powerplants have on the riverine ecosystem. Moreover, since the Saldur stream is part of the International Long Term Ecological Research network, this dataset also constitutes part of the data gathered within this research programme. All samples are preserved at Eurac Research facilities.

Highlights

  • Background & SummaryContributing about 16% of the worldwide electricity production, hydropower is nowadays the largest source of renewable energy[1]

  • A portion of this share is constituted by small hydropower plants (SHPs, definition applying to plants with a capacity of 1–10 MW), whose global installed capacity has increased by approximately 10% from 2013 to 20195

  • We provide the dataset Abundances of benthic invertebrates and related environmental variables over a 5-year sampling period in a glacier-fed stream used for hydropower generation (South Tyrol, Italy)[16] collected to evaluate the effect of a small “run-of-river” hydropower plant located on a glacier-fed stream in the Italian Central Eastern Alps

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Summary

Introduction

Background & SummaryContributing about 16% of the worldwide electricity production, hydropower is nowadays the largest source of renewable energy[1]. Scientific investigation has struggled to follow this course of the hydropower sector, and, despite SHPs amounting to about 91% of currently installed power plants, only 5% of the published studies regarding impact of hydropower energy deals with them[6].

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