st Tutilo Mudumba and
affers from the Uganda
-drive vehicles. Their
wire traps intended to kill
urchison Falls National
rs set more illegal snares
here else in the world.
buffalo, or warthogs for
animals also stumble
are among the poorest in
by impoverished locals
ographic explorer,
ions in the park as the
nprofit engages commu-
nares into intricate
on to learning skills as
e that allows them to
ic needs such as medi-
es but also empowering
employs some 600 arti-
culptures each month,
d States. —JANI HALL
RAP
SURE
RUTH MBABAZI
SNAGGING SNARES
During one five-hour search, a team can collect about
200 traps, which local artisans craft into sculptures of giraffes,
hippos, and other wildlife that populate the park.
THREEGORGES
DAM
Free-flowing
Human impacted
Ob
Yeni
sey
Amazon
Congo
Yangtze
Amur
Ye
llow
Len
a
Ni
le
Mississippi
Ob
Yeni
sey
Yeni
sey
Yeni
sey
AAAmmmaaazzzooonnn
CCCooonnngggooo
YYYaaannngggtttzzzeee
AAAmmmuuurrr
Ye
llow
Ye
llow
Ye
llow
Len
a
Len
a
Len
a
Ni
le
Ni
le
Ni
le
MississippiMississippiMississippi
NORTHNORTHAMERICAAMERICA
AMERICA
AFRICA
ASIA
SOUTH
GORGESTHREE
DAM
EXPLORE | ATLAS
SETTING
RIVERS FREE
BY HEATHER GABRIEL SMITH AND CHRISTINA SHINTANI
LONG, FREE-FLOWING RIVERS are
increasingly rare. These serpentine
giants should support entire ecosystems
and allow the unobstructed movement
of energy, materials, and wildlife in their
waters and in the surrounding land-
scape. But humans have been harness-
ing their immense power for centuries,
building so many dams and reservoirs,
and so much other infrastructure, that
now only 37 percent of the world’s rivers
over a thousand kilometers long (621
miles) still run free. Human impacts
include dams trapping sediment so
that it can no longer naturally shape
the river and deltas, and regulation of
reservoir water levels to reduce flow to
a trickle in some areas. Just how much
these obstructions disrupt connectivity
can vary throughout a river, but under-
standing their many consequences is
crucial to restoring these ecosystems.
28 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC