Abstract

Abstract The water and sediment regimes of the Yellow River are the basis of decision-making of major projects of the Yellow River. Based on water and sediment data at the Huayuankou station, Gaocun station, Aishan station, and Lijin station in the lower reach of the Yellow River, the Mann–Kendall test, the T-test for differences, wavelet analysis, slope change ratio method and the double cumulative curve method were applied to analyze the runoff and sediment regime alteration. The results show that the water and sediment of the lower Yellow River have a significant downward trend, and the annual sediment decreases significantly compared with the annual runoff. The annual runoff and sediment of the four hydrological stations changed around the 1980s and 1990s, respectively. The water and sediment of hydrological stations have periodic variations on multiple time-scales, but the variation scales are different. Precipitation, human activities and other factors lead to the decreasing trend of water and sediment in the lower Yellow River, and their contribution rates to the change of water and sediment are also different. Precipitation contributed 0.15%–8.71% and 0.06%–22.32% to the reduction of runoff and sediment load at the hydrological stations, while human activities contributed 91.29%–99.85% and 77.68%–102.21% to the reduction of runoff and sediment load, respectively. Human activity is the main factor in runoff and sediment reduction.

Highlights

  • Rivers are an indispensable and important resource for human survival and development

  • The Mann–Kendall test was used to analyze the abrupt change of annual runoff and sediment load of the four hydrological stations in the lower Yellow River

  • In the past 60 years, the changes of multi-year runoff and sediment load at the four hydrological stations are divided into two stages, that is, the trend of first increasing and decreasing

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Summary

Introduction

Rivers are an indispensable and important resource for human survival and development. The impacts of climate change and human activities on water and sediment processes are significant. With the superposition of natural factors and human activities, the amount of water and sediment in the basin shows an obvious trend of fluctuation, and the historical water and sediment conditions in the lower reaches of the Yellow River have been completely different from those in modern times. The relationship between water and sediment in the Yellow River has changed, and the sediment inflow in the lower reaches of the Yellow River has decreased sharply (Hu & Zhang ). The serious shrinkage of the lower reaches of the Yellow River, the reduction of flood discharge and sediment load capacity, etc., seriously threatens the flood control safety of the basin and seriously restricts the sustainable development of regional economy and society

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