Abstract

Abstract. Longitudinal and vertical salinity measurements are used in this study to predict the extent of inland seawater intrusion in a deltaic river estuary. A predictive model is constructed to apply to the specific tidal, seasonal, and discharge variability and geometric characteristics of the Shatt al-Arab River (SAR) situated along the border of Iraq and Iran. Reliable hydrologic simulation of salinity dynamics and seawater intrusion was lacking prior to this study. Tidal excursion is simulated analytically using a 1-D analytical salt intrusion model with recently updated equations for tidal mixing. The model was applied under different river conditions to analyse the seasonal variability of salinity distribution during wet and dry periods near spring and neap tides between March 2014 and January 2015. A good fit is possible with this model between computed and observed salinity distribution. Estimating water abstractions along the estuary improves the performance of the equations, especially at low flows and with a well-calibrated dispersion–excursion relationship of the updated equations. Salt intrusion lengths given the current data varied from 38 to 65 km during the year of observation. With extremely low river discharge, which is highly likely there, we predict a much further distance of 92 km. These new predictions demonstrate that the SAR, already plagued with extreme salinity, may face deteriorating water quality levels in the near future, requiring prompt interventions.

Highlights

  • Discharge of fresh river water into the ocean is closely related to vertical and longitudinal salinity variations along an estuary (e.g. Savenije et al, 2013; Whitney, 2010; Becker et al, 2010; Wong, 1995; MacKay and Schumann, 1990)

  • River discharge has a noticeable effect on the tidal range, primarily through the friction term (Savenije, 2005)

  • A 1-D analytical salt intrusion model was applied to the Shatt al-Arab River (SAR) estuary based on four survey campaigns in 2014 and 2015

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Summary

Introduction

Discharge of fresh river water into the ocean is closely related to vertical and longitudinal salinity variations along an estuary (e.g. Savenije et al, 2013; Whitney, 2010; Becker et al, 2010; Wong, 1995; MacKay and Schumann, 1990). River discharge has a noticeable effect on the tidal range, primarily through the friction term (the amount of energy per unit width lost by friction) (Savenije, 2005). The Shatt al-Arab River (SAR) which discharges through its estuary at the border between Iran and Iraq into the gulf is facing serious reductions in freshwater inflows upstream and from its tributaries, as well as significant salt intrusion downstream. The alteration of river discharge affects the estuarine ecosystem in terms of sediments, nutrients, dissolved oxygen, and bottom topography (Sklar and Browder, 1998). All these problems are strongly featured in the SAR

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