Abstract

The Brahmaputra River in South Asia carries one of the world’s highest sediment loads, and the sediment transport dynamics strongly affect the region’s ecology and agriculture. However, present understanding of sediment conditions and dynamics is hindered by limited access to hydrological and geomorphological data, which impacts predictive models needed in management. We here synthesize reported peer-reviewed data relevant to sediment transport and perform a sensitivity analysis to identify sensitive and uncertain parameters, using the one-dimensional model HEC-RAS, considering both present and future climatic conditions. Results showed that there is considerable uncertainty in openly available estimates (260–720 Mt yr−1) of the annual sediment load for the Brahmaputra River at its downstream Bahadurabad gauging station (Bangladesh). This may aggravate scientific impact studies of planned power plant and reservoir construction in the region, as well as more general effects of ongoing land use change and climate change. We found that data scarcity on sediment grain size distribution, water discharge, and Manning’s roughness coefficient had the strongest controls on the modelled sediment load. However, despite uncertainty in absolute loads, we showed that predicted relative changes, including a future increase in sediment load by about 40 % at Bahadurabad by 2075–2100, were consistent across multiple model simulations. Nevertheless, for the future scenarios we found that parameter uncertainty almost doubled for water discharge and river geometry, highlighting that improved information on these parameters could greatly advance the abilities to predict and manage current and future sediment dynamics in the Brahmaputra river basin.

Highlights

  • Sediments carried by river systems are vital from environmental, economic, and social perspectives, not least since sediments contain essential nutrients and material for ecosystems and agricultural lands (Apitz 2012)

  • There is substantial uncertainty in present sediment transport of the Brahmaputra River, due to insufficient availability of observation data on sediment load and parameters needed as input to sediment transport models

  • Our analysis shows that there is considerable uncertainty in openly available estimates (270–720 Mt yr-1) of the annual sediment load for the Brahmaputra River at the Bahadurabad gauging station

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sediments carried by river systems are vital from environmental, economic, and social perspectives, not least since sediments contain essential nutrients and material for ecosystems and agricultural lands (Apitz 2012). The natural variability in hydrological conditions, as well as changes in land use, water use, and climate all affects the quantity and quality of sediments (e.g., Chalov et al 2015). For control and management of sediment flows in future, responses to changes in ambient conditions need to be predicted, especially in regions where livelihood depends on river systems and their natural processes. Present land use changes and expansion of river infrastructure in the Brahmaputra river basin are already affecting both the sediment and hydrological conditions in the basin (Sarma 2005; Ray et al 2015). There is a large potential to expand both the downstream agricultural production and the upstream hydropower generation to increase the low living standards (Dikshit and Dikshit 2014), and such expansion would strongly influence hydrology

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call