Barrier Removal & Mitigation
The objective of this program is to restore aquatic connectivity by supporting the removal of obsolete dams and replacement of undersized or improperly installed culverts at priority locations. This will improve water quality, reduce flood hazards and facilitate aquatic organism passage to foster healthy populations of recreational, commercial, migratory and resident fish species.
Check out WRI's barrier removal and mitigation work in partnership with HREP staff.
Research Goals
- Maintain and apply a road-stream crossing modeling tool that identifies undersized culverts in counties or watersheds of interest for Hudson River Estuary Program staff and county Extension offices throughout New Yok State.
- Conduct analyses on the road-stream crossing modeling tool to inform improvements.
- Provide analyses to predict the impact of dam removals on tributaries to the Hudson River.
- Efficiently identify previously un-inventoried dams and contribute to basin-scle dam inventories that will be of use for aquatic connectivity restoration and assessment.
- Conduct systematic review of existing literature and reports, as well as design and implement a survey administered to aquatic connectivity stakeholders to prioritize obstacles and identify knowledge needs to identify solutions to addressing key social barriers to aquatic connectivity restoration.
- Implement a dam barrier mitigation analysis which identifies optimal strategies to improve aquatic connectivity restoration given the realities of limited restoration budgets and on-the-ground social obstacles to barrier mitigation.
- Establish the potential ecosystem benefits of barrier mitigation.
- Audit existing barrier removal outreach practices and identify strategies to improve the reach and effectiveness of communication with stakeholders
- Predict changes in waterbird biodiversity regionally as small barriers are increasingly removed.
- Provide insight into demographic and genetic fragmentation by in-stream barriers, inform barrier removal planning, and compare the removal of culverts and dams in regard to evolutionary restoration, genetic diversity, and population extinction probability.
Outreach Goals
- Conduct outreach and capacity building to municipalities and watershed groups to increase buy-in and support.
- Refine messaging strategy for dam owners and nearby property owners to address social barriers to dam removal.
- Scale municipal management plans to a tributary wide level to accelerate implementation (culvert replacement, dam removal) while pairing these projects to hazard/flood mitigation plans and natural resource inventories.
- Continue expansion of culvert assessment efforts to characterize baseline conditions and facilitate prioritization for removal.
- Conduct in-reach with DOW, DOT, etc. to streamline policies, regulations and permitting pertaining to dam removal and culvert right-sizing.
Diversity Equity Inclusion/ Environmental Justice
- Evaluate vulnerabilities and risks from dam failures to downstream disadvantaged and environmental justice communities.
- Evaluate municipal financial cost benefit analysis of repairing vs. removing dams to taxpayers, and in particular disadvantaged lower income communities who may not have equal access to impoundments.
- Engage with EJ communities (decision makers and the public) to provide information, connect with local interests and values, share decision support tools and resources, and develop designs and grant applications to implement priority culvert enhancement and fish passage projects that will benefit EJ communities.
Select Projects & Publications
Culvert Model Program 2020: Final Report
OCT 12, 2020
Benjamin H. Houston, GroudPoint Engineering, PLLC
Hudson Tributary Dam Removal
APR 24, 2020
Pat Sullivan, Jeremy Dietrich, Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University. For more information on this work, please check our Barrier Removal & Mitigation Program page.
Rapid Remote Assessment of Culvert Flooding Risk
FEB 18, 2020
Truhlar, A.M., et al., J. Sustainable Water Built Environ., 2020, 6(2): 06020001
WRI researcher featured in Fisheries Magazine for work linking ecology and historic place names
AUG 28, 2019
Andrew Meyer uses historical research and toponymy, the study of place names and their origins, to investigate whether an area referred to as “Sturgeon Pool” on a tributary to the Hudson River might be correctly named as historic habitat of Shortnose Sturgeon Acipenser brevirostrum.
Ghost Dams: A New Inventory of Potential Barriers to Aquatic Connectivity
MAR 25, 2019
Brian Buchanan, NYS Water Resources Institute. Contact NYSWRI for more information.