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Water development
Human population growth since the turn of the century
has created a significant demand for water and
hydroelectric power in western states. To meet that
demand, hundreds of water projects, including dams,
canals and irrigation projects, have been constructed on
the Colorado River and its tributaries. Water projects
have restricted the fish to about 25 percent of their
former range and have blocked some of the spawning
migration routes of the Colorado pikeminnow and other
species. Also, tailwaters six to 20 miles downstream from
dams can be as much as 15 degrees colder than the rare
fishes' preferred habitat. Downstream of Lake Powell,
dams have segmented the once free-flowing, silty and warm
waters of the Colorado River into a series of lakes
connected by cold, clear waters.
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