The SRD ecosystem is significantly affected by the presence of two large hydroelectric power dams constructed in the 1960s — one downstream of the delta at the outlet of
Cedar Lake (
Grand Rapids Dam, Manitoba) and another on the Saskatchewan River upstream of the delta (
E.B. Campbell Dam, Saskatchewan). The Grand Rapids Dam raised the surface of Cedar Lake by , modifying water levels in some of the lower delta and enlarging the open-water area of Cedar Lake to approximately . Lake surface levels typically range between 1.5 and 2 m each year in response to power needs and seasonal discharge variations. Following the development of the Grand Rapids project, the Manitoba government designated portions of the SRD as Wildlife Management Areas in recognition of these environmental impacts and as partial mitigation for habitat loss upstream of the dam. Most of the water supplying the SRD passes through the E.B. Campbell Dam, which impounds nearly all river-borne sediment entering the reservoir (
Tobin Lake) and modifies natural discharge fluctuations such that normally high spring and summer flows are significantly diminished. Removal of sediment outflow by impoundment has caused enlargement of channels downstream of the dam and reduction of sediment-borne nutrients to the delta ecosystem. In addition, suppression of annual discharge peaks has reduced the frequency of overbank flooding and, consequently, the frequency at which water and nutrients are replenished in the delta wetlands. Reduction of peak flows to the delta is exacerbated by the
Gardiner Dam on the South Saskatchewan River whose impoundment,
Lake Diefenbaker, is nearly five times larger than the Tobin Lake reservoir, with a commensurately larger influence on flow patterns in the SRD. The other principal tributary, the North Saskatchewan River, is relatively little affected by dams. Flow hydrographs for the Saskatchewan River at
The Pas indicate that mean annual discharges have declined approximately 25-30% since records were begun in 1913. This reduction is due in large part to upstream consumption, A long-term problem for the SRD wetland ecosystem is the prospect of continually declining inflows resulting from increased up-basin water consumption as populations and demands for water resources continue to grow in the future. In addition, the influence of
climate change within the Saskatchewan River Basin will have an as yet uncertain impact on the SRD. Although agricultural reclamation currently affects only a small portion of the SRD, mostly near the Carrot River west of The Pas, modest expansion continues to take place in areas where wetlands have been drained. In the early 1980s, there was interest in expanding reclamation activities northward from the
Carrot River in the east-central portion of the upper delta, but no such project has yet been initiated. Given the multiple jurisdictional (provincial and federal) responsibilities associated with both the Saskatchewan River and the SRD, there is growing concern that resource management and planning decisions affecting the delta will become more difficult to effectively coordinate in the face of increasing environmental stresses, especially declining water supplies. This, in conjunction with increasing interest and expectations by aboriginal communities to become more actively involved in such decisions, has posed the need for more collaborative planning approaches in the future. == See also ==