Abstract

Approximately one-third of long rivers remain free-flowing, and rivers face a range of ongoing and future threats. In response, there is a heightened call for actions to reverse the freshwater biodiversity crisis, including through formal global targets for protection. The Aichi Biodiversity Targets called for the protection of 17% of inland water areas by 2020. Here, we examine the levels and spatial patterns of protection for a specific type of inland water area—rivers designated as free-flowing. Out of a global total of 11.7 million kilometers of rivers, 1.9 million kilometers (16%) are within protected areas and 10.1 million kilometers are classified as free-flowing, with 1.7 million kilometers of the free-flowing kilometers (17%) within protected areas. Thus, at the global level, the proportion of rivers in protected areas is just below the Aichi Target, and the proportion of free-flowing rivers within protected areas equals that target. However, the extent of protection varies widely across river basins, countries, and continents, and many of these geographic units have a level of protection far lower than the target. Further, high discharge mainstem rivers tend to have lower extent of protection. We conclude by reviewing the limitations of measuring river protection by the proportion of river kilometers within protected areas and describe a range of mechanisms that can provide more effective protection. We also propose a set of recommendations for a more comprehensive quantification of global river protection.

Highlights

  • Rivers provide a broad range of benefits to people and support diverse and productive ecosystems [1]

  • We quantify the length of rivers, and free-flowing rivers that are within the boundaries of protected areas

  • In the Nepal case study in this paper, we found that the development of proposed hydropower dams would cause 40% of river kilometers in Nepal’s protected areas to lose their Free-flowing rivers (FFRs) status, and much of that loss was from dams proposed to be built inside protected areas

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Summary

Introduction

Rivers provide a broad range of benefits to people and support diverse and productive ecosystems [1]. Rivers face a range of ongoing and future threats, including dam construction, water extraction, overfishing, and pollution [4,5]. Due to these ongoing declines and future threats, there is a heightened call for investment and action to halt and reverse the freshwater biodiversity crisis, including through formal global targets for protection [6]. The Aichi Biodiversity Targets, under the Convention on Biological Diversity, called for the protection of 17% of inland water areas by 2020 [7]. We examine the levels and spatial patterns

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