北京师范大学全球变化与地球系统科学研究院
北京师范大学全球变化与地球系统科学研究院
   
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The hydro-environmental response on the lower Yellow River 
to the water-sediment regulation scheme

 

Dongxian Konga, b, Chiyuan Miaoa, b,* , Jingwen Wua, b, Qingyun Duana, b, Qiaohong Suna, b, Aizhong Yea, b, Zhenhua Dia, b, Wei Gonga, b

 

a State Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes and Resource Ecology, College of Global Change and Earth System Science, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, PR China

b Joint Center for Global Change Studies, Beijing 100875, PR China

 

ABSTRACT

Heavy sedimentation has led to the phenomenon of a secondary perched river in the lower Yellow River. The water–sediment regulation scheme (WSRS) using the Xiaolangdi Reservoir was implemented in 2002 to solve this problem. In this study, we analyzed the impact of the WSRS on the lower Yellow River and investigated the mechanism by which the WSRS affects channel erosion. We found that the runoff and sediment load, the sediment grain size, and the river channel of the lower Yellow River have all altered dramatically since the implementation of the WSRS. The variations in runoff and sediment load are no longer synchronized: runoff shows a rising trend, whereas sediment load remains relatively stable. The proportions of runoff and sediment load during the rainy season have decreased, whereas the proportions of runoff and sediment load during the dry season have increased. The median sediment grain size displays a gradually increasing trend top–down along the lower Yellow River. The main river channels in the lower Yellow River have been fully scoured, leading to an increase in channel depth and bankfull discharge. In addition, the sediment load flowing into the estuary reach is relatively stable, with an average value of 158.6 × 106 t, which is sufficient to maintain the dynamic balance of the Yellow River Delta. We found that the degree of channel erosion in the lower Yellow River depends mainly on the incoming sediment concentration.

 

KEY WORDS: Water–sediment regulation scheme; Lower Yellow River; Channel erosion; Sediment concentration

 

PUBLISHED BY: ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2015 79 69-79

 SOURCE:  http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S092585741500107X