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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/40077
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| Title: | Fishways in Portugal: status, main findings and research needs |
| Authors: | Santos, J.M. Quaresma, A.L. Romão, F. Amaral, S.D. Mameri, D. Santo, M. Bochechas, J. Telhado, A. Godinho, F.N. Pádua, J. Pinheiro, P.J. Silva, A.T. Viseu, T. Almeida, P.R. Ferreira, T. Pinheiro, A.N. Branco, P. |
| Keywords: | fish passage pool-type nature-like fishways cyprinid management |
| Issue Date: | 2025 |
| Publisher: | MDPI |
| Citation: | Santos, J.M.; A.L. Quaresma; F. Romão; S.D. Amaral; D. Mameri; M. Santo; J. Bochechas; A. Telhado; F.N. Godinho; J. Pádua; P.J. Pinheiro; A.T. Silva; T. Viseu; P.R. Almeida; T. Ferreira; A.N. Pinheiro & P. Branco (2025). Fishways in Portugal: status, main findings and research needs. Water. 17, 2898. |
| Abstract: | Anthropogenic barriers fragment Portuguese rivers, threatening endemic freshwater fish communities. This study compiled national inventories and peer-reviewed research (2002–2024) to quantify fishway implementation, evolution and typology, while evaluating fish performance from published research. One hundred fishways built between 1950 and 2024 were recorded, half of which were constructed after the implementation of the Water Framework Directive in Portugal (29 Dec 2005), tripling the annual construction rate. Fishways were found to be associated mainly with weirs (46%) and small hydropower plants (44%), with typology being dominated by the pool-type design (67%), nature-like facilities (18%), fish locks and combined systems (6% each), fish lifts (2%) and a single eel pass. Forty scientific contributions addressed fishway effectiveness; three-quarters dealt with pool-type facilities, while 12.5% and 10% focused on nature-like fishways and lifts, respectively. Experimental and field studies highlighted species-specific hydraulic preferences, the benefits of vertical slot and multislot configurations, and the potential of retrofitting fishways with macro-rugosities (i.e., fixed structural elements placed on the bottom) to improve non-salmonid fish passage. However, low attraction efficiency, limited multi-season monitoring and risks of aiding invasive species remain a concern. Research needs are proposed, including the refinement of species-specific hydrodynamic criteria, and the development of standardized efficiency metrics and of selective passage solutions, to advance fishway performance under Mediterranean hydrological constraints. |
| URI: | https://doi.org/10.3390/w17192898 http://hdl.handle.net/10174/40077 |
| Type: | article |
| Appears in Collections: | BIO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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