Spatio-temporal variation of sediment transport in the Selenga River Basin, Mongolia and Russia

被引:0
作者
Sergey R. Chalov
Jerker Jarsjö
Nikolay S. Kasimov
Anna O. Romanchenko
Jan Pietroń
Josefin Thorslund
Ekaterina V. Promakhova
机构
[1] M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University,Faculty of Geography
[2] Stockholm University,Department of Physical Geography and Quaternary Geology
来源
Environmental Earth Sciences | 2015年 / 73卷
关键词
Sediment transport; Sediment budget; Transboundary rivers; Suspended particulate matter; Lake Baikal;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Many Asian rivers have been intensively used to boost economic growth, resulting in sudden and drastic changes in sediment transport patterns. However, a few rivers are still undisturbed. The present paper considers the unregulated Selenga River and its basin, located in Russia and Mongolia. The river contributes to 50 % of the total inflow to Lake Baikal. Pending scientific challenges include the quantification of sediment loads and erosion–deposition patterns along the Selenga River system, the understanding of suspended particulate matter composition and the importance of peak flow events for total sediment discharge and heavy metal transport. Field data and hydraulic modeling converge on showing that peak flow events during spring and summer contribute to the main part (70–80 %) of the annual sediment and pollution loads in upstream parts of the basin. The Selenga River carries mostly silt and sand. The average particle size differs by a factor of four between summer floods and base flow periods. The low amount of particulate organic matter (ranging between 1 and 16 % in the studied rivers) is consistent with the significant role of sediments originating from mining areas and in-channel sources. The bed load transport in the downstream part of the river basin is high (up to 50 % of the total transport), and channel storage plays an important role in the total sediment transport to Lake Baikal. Reported statistically significant multi-decadal declines in sediment fluxes in the downstream Selenga River can be attributed to the abandonment of cultivated lands and (most likely) to changing hydroclimatic factors.
引用
收藏
页码:663 / 680
页数:17
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