Results/Conclusions Over the 20 year span of this study there have been significant declines in the health and abundance of narrowleaf cottonwoods along the permanent transect; an apparent drying of the vegetation in the interior meadows; and a highly significant increase in the abundance of woody vegetation on the point bar. We attribute these changes to a loss of spring flood events due to management of the dam, which carries several unintended consequences. First, the lack of scouring floods has not only failed to remove encroaching willows, but also does not prepare an adequate seed bed for germinating cottonwood seeds, leading to a lack of new cottonwood seedlings. In addition, sediment that was usually carried downstream and deposited on point bars each spring is now trapped in the reservoir. Finally, the stable low flows that now dominate the Dolores River below McPhee Dam are probably unable to recharge the floodplain water table which has lead to an overall drying of the riparian forest. It seems probable that the majority of the floodplain will gradually transition away from native cottonwood-willow woodland into a drier upland forest of juniper and shrubs, causing the riparian zone to narrow in response to this effectively smaller stream.