Abstract

River channel change can be very sensitive to environmental change and human activities and it has been one of the main research topics in fluvial geomorphology. In this study, repeated channel geometric measurements were used to investigate the channel adjustment to water and sediment changes of the lower Yellow River in China in the past few decades. With a high sediment concentration and large variations of water discharge, the lower Yellow River has a much active channel in its form and location, which has hindered previous research efforts to study long-term differentiated erosion/deposition of different geomorphic units in the channel. In this study, we divided each of four typical channel across-sections at hydrological stations in the lower Yellow River into different units according to the geomorphological features, and give a detailed investigation of erosion/deposition processes of these geomorphic units and the interactions between them besides the influence of incoming water and sediment conditions. The results show that with a significant decreasing trend of both the annual runoff and sediment load of the river and abrupt changes in 1985–1996, the overall siltation trend in the river channel before 1990 had been replaced by a slight erosion trend after 2006. In the earlier period, the siltation in the upstream wandering and transitional reaches mainly occurred on floodplains and that in the downstream straight reaches principally on main channel bed. In the later period, erosion occurred mainly on high and low bank slopes in the wandering reaches and on main channel bed in the transitional reaches. The erosion became weak in the wandering reaches after 2010, continued in the transitional reaches, and was still relatively minor in the straight reaches, reflecting the downstream hysteresis channel response to changes in water and sediment discharges down dams. Our results suggest that the seasonal erosion/deposition of a geomorphic unit of the river channel can be attributed to the changes in water and sediment discharges as well as to the interaction between geomorphic units. Siltation on the main channel bed could be attributed to erosion on the bank slopes in both the sections in the wandering and transitional reaches, and erosion of the main channel bed in flood seasons was negatively related with the mean water discharge at the two sections in the straight reaches. This result implies that fixing the bank slopes in the wandering and transitional reaches and raising the water discharge in the straight reach in flood seasons are favorable options for controlling the development of the two-level perching channel of the lower Yellow River.

Highlights

  • Climate change and human activities have greatly changed the water and sediment conditions of rivers [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • It is clear that the inter-annual changes of both the water and sediment discharges at all hydrological stations are significant with a noticeable decreasing trend

  • Using the Pettitt test [38], a widely used method for detecting change points in a sequence of observations, we found that an abrupt decline of the annual mean water and sediment discharges at Huayuankou, Gaocun, Luokou and Lijin hydrological stations occurred in 1990 and 1996, 1986 and 1995, 1986 and 1985, 1986 and 1996, respectively, at a significance level less than 0.05

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change and human activities have greatly changed the water and sediment conditions of rivers [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. The impact of human activities, especially the construction of reservoirs and soil and water conservancy projects on rivers is greater than that of climate change [2,9,10,11,12,13]. Soil and water conservation projects in the Yellow River basin have affected the scouring and silting processes in the river’s mainstream channel by changing the water-sediment regime [18,19,20,21,22,23]. By investigating more than 200 rivers in the United States, Brice [24] found that the lateral swing rates of different channel patterns are different, and the mean lateral swing rate of the river channels with a constant width is the smallest

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