Abstract

As of mid-2021, four hydroelectric dams are operational on the main channel of the Teesta River in the mountainous and tectonically active Sikkim-Darjeeling-Kalimpong region of India. Riparian ecological and fluvial morphological changes after damming have not been documented. This paper describes an early study of a section of the middle Teesta River, at two of the dam-created reservoirs, just before the river enters the plains. High-resolution, multi-beam, geo-located sonar was used to map the bathymetry of the reservoirs. This resulted in the creation of 30cm-resolution bathymetric maps of the two reservoirs showing valley bottom morphology within them.The bathymetric maps were compared withpre-dam digital elevation models of the valley to create topographic change-maps. The change-mapsindicate significant differences in valley morphology due to erosion and deposition processes. Land cover changes due to inundation were quantified from analysis of satellite imagery time series data of the reservoir riparian zones. Land cover change analysis showed a loss of ~ 74,000 trees in ~ 225ha of flooded riparian corridors due to long-term inundation. The study shows that the dams have caused 7.4% of the river length to become quasi-lentic, and drastically altered sediment dynamics and hydrologic flow. Sediment deposition calculations indicate the reservoirs losing almost three-quarters of their surface areas to sediment deposition features within 15years. This study will serve as an important baseline for future studies, and influence design and policy regarding riparian and fluvial ecosystem management, monitoring, and evaluation in the Teesta and similar mountainous river basins in the Eastern Himalaya.

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