Abstract

The Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) is the second largest river of Southeast Asia and one of the rivers with the highest load of suspended sediment delivered to the sea in the world. The Ayeyarwady is the lifeline of Myanmar which concentrates the majority of the population and GDP of the country. It is the main way of transport, a source of fluvial aggregates for development projects, hydropower, and the basin plays a major role in food supply and irrigation. Despite the Ayeyarwady ranking amongst the world’s largest rivers and its vital importance to Myanmar, scarce research has been undertaken to understand its morphodynamics and sediment transport regime. Current load estimates still heavily rely on the only systematic study of sediment transport dating back to the 19th century. Here, we provide a novel estimate for the recent washload sediment transport based on a field calibrated remote sensing model of surface suspended sediments concentrations. We show that the Ayeyarwady has likely become the river with the second or third largest delivery of washload to the sea in the world since it has so far been much less affected by damming compared to the vast majority of other rivers.

Highlights

  • The Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) River is one of the less known large rivers in the world and the second-largest river of Southeast Asia in water discharge, after the Mekong [1]

  • The calibrated model predicts the suspended sediment concentration (SSSC) from the surface reflectance reliably with an R2 of 0.82 (Fig 2a), i.e. the variability of SSSC is efficiently explained by the level of surface reflectance

  • Given that the range of SSSC around Pyay can be 1,500 mg/l, the calculated root mean square error (RMSE) represents less than 3% of the SSSC range

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Summary

Introduction

The Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) River is one of the less known large rivers in the world and the second-largest river of Southeast Asia in water discharge, after the Mekong [1]. It is still having a natural hydrological regime because regulation by dams is incipient. The Ayeyarwady Delta is considered the least impacted of the large deltas of Asia, and the most extremely prone to floods by tropical storms and coastal storm surges. It is known to suffer the most infamous and deadly floods by the interactions between tropical storms-cyclones and fluvial floods such as tropical storm Nargis in 2008, which produced 138,000 fatalities

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