Abstract
Despite the growing number of dam removals, very few have been studied
to understand their impacts on stream fish communities. An even smaller
proportion of dam removal studies focus on the impacts of low-head dam
removals, although they are the most common type of dam. Instead, the
majority of removal studies focus on the impacts of larger dams. In this
study, two previously impounded Illinois rivers were monitored to assess
the impacts of low-head dam removal on the functional assemblage of
stream fishes. Study sites were sampled each fall from 2012-2015
(pre-dam removal) and 2018-2020 (post-dam removal) in three habitat
types: downstream of the dam, impounded areas, and runs of rivers.
Fishes were aggregated into habitat and reproductive guilds, relating
community changes to habitat, environmental metrics, and stream quality.
Prior to removal, the slackwater guild was the most prevalent habitat
guild throughout both rivers, while nest builders and benthic spawners
were the most abundant reproductive guilds. During the two years
following removal, habitat conditions and fish assemblages improved
throughout both rivers, with improvements in QHEI, IBI, water
temperature, and dissolved oxygen, as well as a shift to more evenly
distributed representation of habitat and reproductive guilds. The
improvements in environmental metrics and overall stream quality,
particularly in the formerly impounded habitats, indicate diminished
habitat homogeneity, and a shift towards natural habitat diversity. This
habitat diversification likely led to the restoration of a range of
potential niches, thereby increasing the array of guild types inhabiting
these rivers, while simultaneously preventing single-guild dominance.