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Intraseasonal‐to‐Interannual Analysis of Discharge and Suspended Sediment Concentration Time‐Series of the Upper Changjiang (Yangtze River)
Author(s) -
Juez C.,
Garijo N.,
Hassan M. A.,
NadalRomero E.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1029/2020wr029457
Subject(s) - sediment , sediment transport , hydrology (agriculture) , environmental science , sedimentary budget , discharge , channel (broadcasting) , precipitation , yangtze river , surface runoff , geology , china , drainage basin , ecology , geomorphology , geography , geotechnical engineering , cartography , engineering , meteorology , electrical engineering , biology , archaeology
Abstract Sediment transport is the main driver of the channel morphology and landscape evolution, with implications for chemical and biological river processes, and human‐related activities. Understanding the processes governing the relations between discharge and suspended sediments is essential for the management of river catchments and river networks. Here, we use the method of wavelet transformation to identify the time‐scale dependency of suspended sediment patterns concerning the temporally and spatially uneven transient processes of sediment production, accumulation, and transport. We analyze the temporal variation of concurrent discharge and suspended sediment fluxes for the Upper Changjiang (Yangtze River, China) at Pingshan station by using a long‐term database collected for over 50 years. Furthermore, we bridge the limitations of pure predictive models to learn from temporal data structures with the main purpose of identifying the mechanisms underpinning the suspended sediment patterns (e.g., climatic forces). Intraseasonal‐to‐seasonal, annual, and inter‐annual dominant time‐scales are thus identified. The short time‐scales are driven by the bi‐modal seasonal precipitation pattern specific to the climate of the region and provide a continuous supply of sediments to the river. The large time‐scales, controlled by high magnitude flow events and within‐reach sediment storage, display alternating periods of increasing and decreasing sediment fluxes; ultimately, they maintain the river channel within balance or within a moderate positive sediment accumulation process. This analysis and methodology help to understand temporal sediment dynamics, and ultimately to manage river catchments.