Volume 32, Issue 1
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Time‐varying suspended sediment‐discharge rating curves to estimate climate impacts on fluvial sediment transport

Kuk‐Hyun Ahn

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: ahnkukhyun@gmail.com

Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA

Correspondence

Kuk‐Hyun Ahn, Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.

Email: ahnkukhyun@gmail.com

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Scott Steinschneider

Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA

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First published: 16 November 2017
Citations: 6

Abstract

This study presents time‐varying suspended sediment‐discharge rating curves to model suspended‐sediment concentrations (SSCs) under alternative climate scenarios. The proposed models account for hysteresis at multiple time scales, with particular attention given to systematic shifts in sediment transport following large floods (long‐term hysteresis). A series of nested formulations are tested to evaluate the elements embedded in the proposed models in a case study watershed that supplies drinking water to New York City. To maximize available data for model development, a dynamic regression model is used to estimate SSC based on denser records of turbidity, where the parameters of this regression are allowed to vary over time to account for potential changes in the turbidity‐SSC relationship. After validating the proposed rating curves, we compare simulations of SSC among a subset of models in a climate change impact assessment using an ensemble of flow simulations generated using a stochastic weather generator and hydrologic model. We also examine SSC estimates under synthetic floods generated using a peaks‐over‐threshold model. Our results indicate that estimates of extreme SSC under new climate and hydrologic scenarios can vary widely depending on the selected model and may be significantly underestimated if long‐term hysteresis is ignored when simulating impacts under sequences of large storm event. Based on the climate change scenarios explored here, average annual maximum SSC could increase by as much as 2.45 times over historical values.

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 6

  • Time‐varying, nonlinear suspended sediment rating curves to characterize trends in water quality: An application to the Upper Hudson and Mohawk Rivers, New York, Hydrological Processes, 10.1002/hyp.13443, 33, 13, (1865-1882), (2019).
  • Using sediment rating parameters to evaluate the changes in sediment transport regimes in the middle Yellow River basin, China, Hydrological Processes, 10.1002/hyp.13488, 33, 18, (2481-2497), (2019).
  • The role of hydrological conditions for riverine Hg species transport in the Idrija mining area, Environmental Pollution, 10.1016/j.envpol.2019.01.109, (2019).
  • Shining light on the storm: in-stream optics reveal hysteresis of dissolved organic matter character, Biogeochemistry, 10.1007/s10533-019-00561-w, (2019).
  • Impact of an Extreme Typhoon Event on Subsequent Sediment Discharges and Rainfall-Driven Landslides in Affected Mountainous Regions of Taiwan, Geofluids, 10.1155/2018/8126518, 2018, (1-11), (2018).
  • The impact of persistent dynamics on suspended sediment load estimation, Geomorphology, 10.1016/j.geomorph.2018.09.001, 322, (132-147), (2018).

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