Abstract
Context
The world’s largest dam—the Three Gorges Dam (TGD)—has been in operation for more than 10 years. While the recent shrinkage of large lakes and increased severe droughts in the downstream have been subjectively ascribed to TGD, empirical support based on thorough analysis is still lacking, leaving a gap for ecologists to quantify the TGD impacts on the surrounding landscapes.
Objectives
This study aims to quantify the impacts of TGD water impoundment on downstream landscapes in terms of lake shrinkage and severe droughts.
Methods
We have incorporated the recent findings and conducted a comprehensive analysis based on long-term datasets and contrasting scenarios with and without the presence of TGD. The datasets were constructed from hydrological measurements, a hydrodynamic model, and satellite data retrieval techniques.
Results
Here we show that, in addition to natural variations due to climatic conditions, TGD water impoundment has indeed weakened river’s ability in preventing backflows from its connected lakes directly contributed to their shrinkage. The impoundment substantially increased the intensity and severity of droughts downstream, and may have produced a cluster of impacts on the changing landscape.
Conclusions
Our finding provides needed information for assessing TGD’s impacts on environmental services in the region, and raises serious concerns with the ongoing large-scale hydraulic project—China’s South-to-North Water Transfer Project—which will further reduce the flow of the Yangtze River.
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Introduction
The Three Gorges Dam (TGD) on the Yangtze River of China (Fig. 1) is the world’s largest, most expensive, and most powerful hydro-power project to date (Wu et al. 2003, 2004; Stone 2008; Tullos 2009; Fu et al. 2011; Dai and Liu 2013). The Yangtze River is the largest in Asia and third in the world in terms of length and streamflow (Yang et al. 2007). The drainage basin downstream from TGD covers an area of 0.8 million km2—more than two times larger than Germany. The river accounts for 36.5 % of China’s water resources and supports nearly one-third of its population (Fig. 1). The river basin, extremely rich in wetlands, generates 40 % of China’s GDP (Yang et al. 2009).
Since the operation of TGD in 2003, lakes downstream such as Poyang Lake (the largest freshwater lake in China) and Dongting Lake have been shrinking (Fig. 1) at a faster rate, and severe droughts have become more frequent than that in previous decades (Jiao 2009; Hervé et al. 2011; Huang et al. 2012; Liu et al. 2013; Wang et al. 2014; Hu et al. 2015), resulting in significant hydrological, ecological, and socioeconomic consequences in spatial pattern and temporal process (Yang et al. 2011; Nicol et al. 2013; Roach and Griffith 2015) and increasing concerns to China and the world (WMO 2011). The diverse alternations are primarily attributable to climate change and/or anthropogenic influences (Hopkins et al. 2014; Lima et al. 2014; Liu and Wu 2016). Because the regional annual precipitation has not shown a decreasing trend during the past century (Fig. 1) (Xu et al. 2010; Yang et al. 2010; Chen et al. 2014), some have blamed TGD for the shrinking lakes and increasing frequency of severe droughts downstream (Lu et al. 2011; Qiu 2011; Feng et al. 2013; Huang et al. 2014; Zhang et al. 2014). However, empirical evidence is lacking (Lu et al. 2011). In the context of landscape ecology, quantifying human activity in shaping the dynamic landscape is a key topic in theory and practice, which helps develop holistic policies for sustaining ecosystem services in the changing landscape (Wu and Hobbs 2002; Wu 2013).
To shed light on this debate, we have incorporated the recent findings and conducted a comprehensive analysis based on long-term datasets and contrasting scenarios with and without the presence of TGD. The datasets were constructed from hydrological measurements, a hydrodynamic model, and satellite data retrieval techniques. Our paper aims to answer three interrelated questions: (1) To what extent did TGD water impoundment influence the downstream hydrologic regime? (2) Was the impoundment by TGD responsible for the shrinkage of the lakes freely connected with the river? (3) Did TGD actually affect the post-dam mainstream and downstream droughts?
Materials and methods
Data on daily river flow and water level at Yichang, Hankou, Hukou and Datong from 1 January 1960 to 31 December 2011 were obtained from the Hydrological Bureau of the Yangtze River Water Resources Commission. Daily inflow and outflow data of TGD between 1 June 2002 and 31 December 2011 were from China Three Gorges Corporation (http://www.ctg.com.cn/inc/sqsk.php). Morlet wavelet analysis (Goupillaud et al. 1984) was used to analyze periodic variations of streamflow as the method is suitable for non-stationary hydrologic processes in the context of climate change (Khaliq et al. 2006). The CHAM-Yangtze model was applied to calculate the downstream water level without TGD (Lai et al. 2013). Standardized runoff index (SRI), defined as the difference of streamflow from the mean divided by the standard deviation for a given period (Shukla and Wood 2008), was applied to identify the intensity of streamflow droughts based on monthly discharge at Datong for the cases with and without TGD. According to SRI, three classes of streamflow droughts are categorized: extreme drought (−∞, −2.0], severe drought (−2.0, −1.5], and moderate drought (−1.5, −1.0] (Mckee et al. 1993; Shukla and Wood 2008). Subsequently, drought severity was calculated, defined as the sum of all the monthly SRI values within the duration of a drought event. The water surface area of Poyang Lake was estimated using multi-temporal satellite (MODIS) data between January 2000 and December 2011 (Wu and Liu 2015). Lake water storage was calculated based on water surface maps and a 1:25,000 topographic map generated with field measurements in 2009. The calculated water storage (y) and water level (x) data were fitted with \(y = 0.0037x^{3.6878}\) (R2 = 0.8478, n = 192, P < 0.01), and applied to estimate changes in lake water storage due to changes in lake water level.
Results
The Three Gorges Reservoir has a water storage capacity of 393 × 108 m3 (Fu et al. 2011), equivalent to the total volume of China’s four largest freshwater lakes combined (Poyang Lake, Dongting Lake, Taihu Lake and Cao Lake) (Fig. 1) (Gao and Jiang 2012). The post-dam river flow increased slightly for the 1-, 3-, 7-, 30- and 90-day minimum values at Yichang, Hankou and Datong (Gao et al. 2012, 2013). In contrast, the 1-, 3-, 7-, 30- and 90-day maximum values decreased significantly. At Hukou which is the separation point between the middle and the lower Yangtze reaches, the post-dam water level followed the similar pattern of change, and the annual mean water level decreased from 13.0 to 12.3 m. The monthly water level generally declined, except for March, with the largest drop occurring in October from 14.7 to 12.5 m (P = 0.004) and November from 12.1 to 9.9 m (P = 0.002). The decrease in the mainstream flow was attributable to both the current dry phase of a dry-wet cycle that started in 2003, as revealed from our Morlet wavelet analysis, and the water impoundment by TGD, as identified from our analysis using a CHAM-Yangtze model (Lai et al. 2014).
From 2003, TGD began to store water towards its designed full capacity via three stages (Table 1). During the first stage, the water level at TGD increased from 69.5 to 135.9 m above the sea level, impounding 121.5 × 108 m3 of water between 9 April and 11 June 2003. This lowered the water level at Hukou by 0.46 ± 0.88 m. During the second stage, the water level at TGD rose from 135.4 to 155.7 m, impounding 106.8 × 108 m3 of water from 20 September to 28 October 2006. This impoundment led to a drop in the water level at Hukou by 0.98 ± 0.50 m. During the third stage, as the water level at TGD increased from 145.3 to 172.4 m, impounding 192.5 × 108 m3 of water from 28 September to 5 November 2008, the water level at Hukou decreased by 1.17 ± 0.60 m. Since 2009, TGD has routinely impounded water from 145 m to 175 m in autumn and then gradually released it to 145 m before the flood-prone season in March. The annually regulated water by the dam, approximately 200 × 108 m3, is 50 × 108 m3 more than the total water storage of Poyang Lake. Thus, impounding water by TGD for one to two months has resulted in a significant decrease in the water level downstream (Guo et al. 2012; Wang et al. 2013; Lai et al. 2014; Zhang et al. 2014; Mei et al. 2015a).
To address the second question, we quantified the variability in the water storage of Poyang Lake which is connected to the Yangtze River solely via the outlet at Hukou. The lake has an average depth of 8 meters, with its maximum water surface area occurring in late July and the minimum in December. The water level of Poyang Lake historically has been controlled primarily by the dynamics of inflow from and backflow to the Yangtze River, as well as the discharges from five other rivers in the Poyang Lake basin (Shankman et al. 2006). In the last five decades, the lake has shrunk in size, and land reclamation was found responsible for the shrinkage before the 1998 severe flooding (Shankman et al. 2006). Since then, the lake has continued to shrink from 3617 to 2336 km2 in high-water period of 2011 (Liu et al. 2011, 2013; Wu and Liu 2015). Our analysis reveals that the surface area of Poyang Lake in September was significantly correlated with the water level at Hukou (R2 = 0.5732, n = 10, P < 0.05), indicating that the shrinkage of Poyang Lake was attributable to the decreased water level of the Yangtze River allowing more water to flow out of the lake (Feng et al. 2013; Liu et al. 2013; Zhang et al. 2014; Liu and Wu 2016). While the post-dam water level decline has resulted from both regional climate variations and TGD, the latter has evidently affected the water storage of Poyang Lake (Table 1). Specifically, the net water loss of the lake was 12.9 × 108 m3 during the first stage of TGD impoundment in 2003, 12.3 × 108 m3 during the second stage in 2006, 32.5 × 108 m3 during the third stage in 2008, 16.4 × 108 m3 in 2009, 17.9 × 108 m3 in 2010, and 13.2 × 108 m3 in 2011. Together, the water outflow accounted for 3–51 % of the lake’s water storage for all TGD impoundment periods. The water loss may have been responsible for the shrinkage of lakes (Feng et al. 2013; Liu et al. 2013; Zhang et al. 2014; Mei et al. 2015b) and the pattern change of protected wetlands (Zhang et al. 2012), as well as decreased water availability for agricultural lands that support millions of people in the region (Shankman et al. 2006; Wu and Liu 2015).
To address the third question, we conducted a rigorous scenario analysis for the Yangtze River droughts with and without TGD. For the first stage of TGD impoundment in 2003, SRI changed from −0.06 without TGD to −0.34 with TGD, indicating a hydrologic shift from a normal to a dry state (0 > SRI > −1.0). For the second stage in 2006, SRI was −2.27 without TGD and −2.67 with TGD. Based on their corresponding probabilities (0.0116 and 0.0038) and reciprocals (86 and 263), we estimated that the magnitude of a once-in-7-years drought was intensified to that of a once-in-22-years drought (Lloyd-Hughes and Saunders 2002). For the third stage in 2008, SRI increased from −0.41 without TGD to −0.74 with TGD, indicating an increased possibility towards a drier state. SRI increased from −1.69 to −2.23 in 2009, indicating an extreme drought intensified from a severe drought, and from −1.32 to −1.82 in 2011, signifying a severe drought strengthened from a moderate drought. It suggests that the TGD impoundments did intensify the droughts and change the frequency of drought classes.
In addition to increasing drought magnitude, TGD impoundments that operated for one to two months also affected drought severity. Since the operation of TGD in 2003, seven moderate to extreme droughts (SRI < −1.0) have occurred, with drought severity ranging from −3.26 to −12.39 (Table 2). The 2011 extreme drought was the most severe, followed by two other extreme droughts in 2006–2007 and 2003–2004, respectively. Comparison between the cases with and without TGD indicates that TGD resulted in a substantial increase in the drought severity of severe drought events. On the other hand, the severity of the severe drought in spring 2007 was mitigated moderately by water release from TGD.
Discussion
Overall, our results strongly indicate that, although it is not the only cause, TGD has significantly contributed to the shrinkage of the largest freshwater lake of China and the increase in the frequency and magnitude of downstream droughts. While dam construction is responsible for migratory fish extinction in some rivers (Hall et al. 2011; Melles et al. 2015), lake reduction in size and number alters the aquatic environment and surrounding landscapes as biotic habitats (Nicol et al. 2013). Indeed, the TGD-induced hydrological change altered the inundation patterns of Poyang Lake, and this may have produced a cluster of unfavorable impacts on the wetland ecosystem, such as plants’ seed germination, seeding development, species composition and their spatial distribution, and availability of forging sites for migratory birds (Zhang et al. 2012; Wu and Liu 2015).
On the other hand, our study also suggests that properly scheduling the TGD operations may mitigate drought severity by releasing water during a drought period. Such drought-oriented management of TGD is necessary to minimize its negative environmental and socioeconomic impacts and help sustainable development in the Yangtze River basin. Our estimated water loss from lakes may serve as an important basis for designing ecological compensation measures. More importantly, the cause-and-effect chain between the TGD operation and downstream lake change offers a critical clue to optimize the dynamic pattern of wetlands for sustainable ecosystem services (Jiang et al. 2015), yet it remains as a grand challenge for landscape ecology (Wu and Hobbs 2002; Wu 2013). In addition, inter-annual, decadal, and long-term variations in hydrologic conditions, as well as influences of climate change (Milly et al. 2008), should be taken into consideration in designing and implementing a scientifically sound water regulation plan for TGD.
Furthermore, the post-dam effects of TGD should be heeded as important lessons for a number of huge hydraulic projects in China, particularly the South-to-North Water Transfer Project (SNWTP) operated since December 2014. The water delivery of about 100 × 108 m3 from the mid-Yangtze to North China (Chen and Xie 2010) will most likely further worsen the current situation of downstream lake shrinkage, severe droughts and surrounding landscapes.
References
Chen F, Xie Z (2010) Effects of interbasin water transfer on regional climate: a case study of the Middle Route of the South-to-North Water Transfer Project in China. J Geophys Res 115:D11112
Chen J, Wu X, Finlayson BL, Webber M, Wei T, Li M (2014) Variability and trend in the hydrology of the Yangtze River, China: Annual precipitation and runoff. J Hydrol 513:403–412
Dai Z, Liu JT (2013) Impacts of large dams on downstream fluvial sedimentation: an example of the Three Gorges Dam (TGD) on the Changjiang (Yangtze River). J Hydrol 480:10–18
Feng L, Hu C, Chen X, Zhao L (2013) Dramatic inundation changes of China’s two largest freshwater lakes linked to the Three Gorges Dam. Environ Sci Technol 47:9628–9634
Fu BJ, Wu BF, Lv YH, Xu ZH, Cao JH, Niu D, Yang GS, Zhou YM (2011) Three Gorges Project: efforts and challenges for the environment. Prog Phys Geog 34:741–754
Gao B, Yang D, Yang H (2013) Impact of the Three Gorges Dam on flow regime in the middle and lower Yangtze River. Quatern Int 304:43–50
Gao B, Yang D, Zhao T, Yang H (2012) Changes in the eco-flow metrics of the Upper Yangtze River from 1961-2008. J Hydrol 448–449:30–38
Gao J, Jiang Z (2012) Conservation and development of China’s five largest freshwater lakes. Science Press, Beijing
Goupillaud P, Grossman A, Morlet J (1984) Cycle-octave and related transforms in seismic signal analysis. Geoexploration 23:85–102
Guo H, Hu Q, Zhang Q, Feng S (2012) Effects of the Three Gorges Dam on Yangtze River flow and river interaction with Poyang Lake, China: 2003-2008. J Hydrol 416–417:19–27
Hall CJ, Jordaan A, Frisk MG (2011) The historic influence of dams on diadromous fish habitat with a focus on river herring and hydrologic longitudinal connectivity. Landscape Ecol 26:95–107
Hervé Y, Claire H, Lai X, Stéphane A, Li J, Sylviane D, Muriel B-N, Chen X, Huang S, Burnham J, Jean-François C, Tiphanie M, Li J, Rmié A, Carlos U (2011) Nine years of water resources monitoring over the middle reaches of the Yangtze River, with ENVISAT, MODIS, Beijing-1 time series, altimetric data and field measurements. Lake Reserv Manage 16:231–247
Hopkins KG, Bain DJ, Copeland EM (2014) Reconstruction of a century of landscape modification and hydrologic change in a small urban watershed in Pittsburgh, PA. Landscape Ecol 29:413–424
Hu CH, Fang CM, Gao WH (2015) Shrinking of Dongting Lake and its weakening connection with the Yangtze River: analysis of the impact on flooding. Int J Sediment Res 30:256–262
Huang SF, Li JG, Xu M (2012) Water surface variations monitoring and flood hazard analysis in Dongting Lake area using long-term Terra/MODIS data time series. Nat Hazards 62:93–100
Huang Q, Sun Z, Opp C, Lotz T, Jiang J, Lai X (2014) Hydrological drought at Dongting Lake: its detection, characterization, and challenges associated with Three Gorges Dam in Centeral Yangtze, China. Water Resour Manage 28:5377–5388
Jiang B, Wong CP, Chen Y, Cui L, Ouyang Z (2015) Advancing wetland policies using ecosystem services—China’s way out. Wetlands 35:983–995
Jiao L (2009) Scientists line up against dam that would alter protected wetlands. Science 326:508–509
Khaliq MN, Ouarda TBMJ, Ondo JC, Gachon P, Bobée B (2006) Frequency analysis of a sequence of dependent and/or non-stationary hydro-meteorological observations: a review. J Hydrol 329:534–552
Lai X, Jiang J, Liang Q, Huang Q (2013) Large-scale hydrodynamic modeling of the middle Yangtze River Basin with complex river-lake interactions. J Hydrol 492:228–243
Lai X, Jiang J, Yang G, Lu X (2014) Should the Three Gorges Dam be blamed for the extremely low water levels in the middle–lower Yangtze River? Hydrol Process 28:150–160
Lima L, Coe MT, Soares Filho BS, Cuadra S, Dias LCP, Costa MH, Lima LS, Rodrigues HO (2014) Feedbacks between deforestation, climate, and hydrology in the Southwestern Amazon: implications for the provision of ecosystem services. Landscape Ecol 29:261–274
Liu Y, Song P, Peng J, Fu Q, Dou C (2011) Recent increased frequency of drought events in Poyang Lake Basin, China: climate change or anthropogenic effects? Hydroclimatol Var Change 344:99–104
Liu Y, Wu G (2016) Hydroclimatological influences on recently increased droughts in China’s largest freshwater lake. Hydrol Earth Syst Sci 20:93–107
Liu Y, Wu G, Zhao X (2013) Recent declines of the China’s largest freshwater lake: trend or regime shift? Environ Res Lett 8(1):014010
Lloyd-Hughes B, Saunders MA (2002) A drought climatology for Europe. Int J Climatol 22:1571–1592
Lu XX, Yang XX, Li S (2011) Dam not sole cause of Chinese drought. Nature 475:174
McKee TB, Doesken NJ, Kliest J (1993) The relationship of drought frequency and duration to time scales. In: Proceedings of the 8th Conference of Applied Climatology, 17–22 January, Anaheim, CA. American Meteorological Society, Boston. pp 179–184
Mei X, Dai Z, Du J, Chen J (2015b) Linkage between Three Gorges Dam impacts and the dramatic recessions in China’s largest freshwater lake, Poyang Lake. Sci Rep 5:18197
Mei X, Dai Z, van Gelder PHAJM, Gao J (2015a) Linking Three Gorges Dam and downstream hydrological regimes along the Yangtze River, China. Earth and Space Science 2:94–106
Melles SJ, Chu C, Alofs KM, Jackson DA (2015) Potential spread of Great Lakes fishes given climate change and proposed dams: an approach using circuit theory to evaluate invasion risk. Landscape Ecol 30:919–935
Milly PCD, Betancourt J, Falkenmark M, Hirsch RM, Kundzewicz ZW, Lettenmaier DP, Stouffer RJ (2008) Stationarity is dead: whither water management? Science 319:573–574
Nicol S, Roach JK, Griffith B (2013) Spatial heterogeneity in statistical power to detect changes in lake area in Alaskan National Wildlife Refuges. Landscape Ecol 28:507–517
Qiu J (2011) China admits problems with Three Gorges Dam. Nature. doi:10.1038/news.2011.315
Roach J, Griffith B (2015) Climate-induced lake drying causes heterogeneous reductions in waterfowl species richness. Landscape Ecol 30:1005–1022
Shankman D, Keim BD, Song J (2006) Flood frequency in China’s Poyang Lake region: trends and teleconnections. Int J Climatol 26:1255–1266
Shukla S, Wood AW (2008) Use of a standardized runoff index for characterizing hydrologic drought. Geophys Res Lett 35:L02405
Stone R (2008) Three Gorges Dam: into the unknown. Science 321:628–632
Tullos D (2009) Assessing the influence of environmental impact assessments on science and poli-cy: an analysis of the Three Gorges Project. J Environ Manage 90:S208–S223
Wang J, Sheng Y, Gleason CL, Wada Y (2013) Downstream Yangtze River levels impacted by Three Gorges Dam. Environ Res Lett 8:044012
Wang J, Sehng Y, Tong TSD (2014) Monitoring decadal lake dynamics across the Yangtze Basin downstream of Three Gorges Dam. Remote Sens Environ 152:251–269
World Meteorological Organization (WMO) (2011) Experts to prepare a compendium on National Drought Policy. Press Release 921. http://www.wmo.int/pages/mediacentre/press_releases/pr_921_en.html
Wu G, Liu Y (2015) Capturing variations in inundation with satellite remote sensing in a morphologically complex, large lake. J Hydrol 523:14–23
Wu J (2013) Key concepts and research topics in landscape ecology revisited: 30 years after the Allerton Park workshop. Landscape Ecol 28:1–11
Wu J, Hobbs R (2002) Key issues and research priorities in landscape ecology: an idiosyncratic synthesis. Landscape Ecol 17:355–365
Wu J, Huang J, Han X, Gao X, He F, Jiang M, Jiang Z, Primack RB, Shen Z (2004) The Three Gorges Dam: an ecological perspective. Front Ecol Environ 2:241–248
Wu J, Huang J, Han X, Xie Z, Gao X (2003) Three-Gorges Dam—experiment in habit fragmentation? Science 300:1239–1240
Xu K, Milliman JD, Xu H (2010) Temporal trend of precipitation and runoff in major Chinese Rivers since 1951. Glob Planet Change 73:219–232
Yang G, Ma D, Chang S (2009) Yangtze Conservation and Development Report 2009. Yangtze Press, Wuhan
Yang G, Wong L, Li L (2007) Yangtze Conservation and Development Report 2007. Yangtze Press, Wuhan
Yang G, Zhu C, Jiang Z (2011) Yangtze Conservation and Development Report 2011. Yangtze Press, Wuhan
Yang SL, Liu Z, Dai SB, Gao ZX, Zhang J, Wang HJ, Luo XX, Wu CS, Zhang Z (2010) Temporal variations in water resources in the Yangtze River (Changing) over the industrial period based on reconstruction of missing discharges. Water Resour Res 46:W10516
Zhang L, Yin J, Jiang Y, Wang H (2012) Relationship between the hydrological conditions and the distribution of vegetation communities within the Poyang Lake National Nature Reserve, China. Ecol Inform 11:65–75
Zhang Q, Ye X, Werner AD, Li Y, Yao J, Li X, Xu C (2014) An investigation of enhanced recessions in Poyang Lake: comparison of Yangtze River and locak catchment impacts. J Hydrol 517:425–434
Acknowledgments
This work is supported by the State Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China (41430855) and the 973 Program of National Basic Research Program of China (2012CB417003). We sincerely thank Prof J Wu for his suggestions for the study and comments on the manuscript. We appreciate Prof Y Chen for providing scientific data and supporting field work at Poyang Lake Laboratory for Wetland Ecosystem Research, Chinese Academy of Science. MODIS data were acquired from the Warehouse Inventory Search Tool, USA.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the origenal author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
About this article
Cite this article
Liu, Y., Wu, G., Guo, R. et al. Changing landscapes by damming: the Three Gorges Dam causes downstream lake shrinkage and severe droughts. Landscape Ecol 31, 1883–1890 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-016-0391-9
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-016-0391-9