The sedimentology of gravel beds in groundwater-dominated chalk streams: Implications for sediment modelling and management

IF 1.7 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Beth Mondon, David A. Sear, Adrian L. Collins, Peter J. Shaw, Tim Sykes
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Abstract

Elevated fine sediment accumulation in a river system's gravel bed is known to cause detrimental ecological impacts. Current sediment targets and approaches to mitigation have failed due to the oversimplification of geomorphological processes controlling fine sediment accumulation and the lack of relevant scientific knowledge underpinning them. This is particularly apparent in chalk streams (groundwater-dominated systems) which regularly exhibit high rates of sediment accumulation despite low suspended sediment yields. A necessary first step is to better characterise their sedimentology; thus, the novelty of this study was to determine the sedimentological characteristics of chalk stream gravel beds, specifically the quantity and distribution of fine sediment with depth. We collated published and unpublished freeze-core data, encompassing 90 sites across 11 UK chalk streams. Results showed average quantities of fine sediment (<2 mm) in chalk stream gravel beds were 25% by weight, with >75% of beds exceeding thresholds for ecological degradation. Quantities of fine sediment increased with increasing depth into the bed, with an average increase between surface and subsurface layers of 54%, and 89% of the gravel bed over-saturated with fine sediment. Regional differences were attributed to differences in stream power and local sediment sources, including surficial geology and catchment land use. Additionally, a major contrast was identified between experimental conditions in flume studies used to establish models describing interactions/mechanisms of fine sediment infiltration into immobile gravel beds and the natural conditions observed in chalk streams. As such, the use of such models as a basis to explore sediment management scenarios is unlikely to predict the outcome of such management techniques correctly in a real-world situation.
以地下水为主的白垩溪流中砾石床的沉积学:对沉积物建模和管理的影响
众所周知,河流系统砾石河床中细小沉积物堆积过多会对生态造成有害影响。由于控制细小沉积物积累的地貌过程过于简单化,且缺乏相关科学知识的支撑,目前的沉积物目标和减缓方法都已失败。这一点在白垩溪流(以地下水为主的系统)中尤为明显,尽管悬浮泥沙量较低,但白垩溪流却经常表现出较高的泥沙累积率。因此,本研究的新颖之处在于确定白垩溪砾石床的沉积学特征,特别是细沉积物的数量和随深度的分布。我们整理了已发表和未发表的冻芯数据,涵盖英国 11 条白垩溪流的 90 个地点。结果显示,白垩溪砾石床中细小沉积物(2 毫米)的平均数量占重量的 25%,75% 的砾石床超过了生态退化的临界值。细沉积物的数量随着河床深度的增加而增加,表层和次表层之间的平均增加率为 54%,89% 的砾石河床细沉积物过饱和。区域差异归因于溪流动力和当地沉积物来源的不同,包括表层地质和集水区土地利用。此外,水槽研究中的实验条件与白垩溪流中观察到的自然条件之间存在巨大反差,前者用于建立描述细沉积物渗入不动砾石床的相互作用/机制的模型,后者则用于建立描述细沉积物渗入砾石床的相互作用/机制的模型。因此,以此类模型为基础来探讨泥沙管理方案,不太可能在实际情况中正确预测此类管理技术的结果。
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来源期刊
River Research and Applications
River Research and Applications 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
9.10%
发文量
158
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: River Research and Applications , previously published as Regulated Rivers: Research and Management (1987-2001), is an international journal dedicated to the promotion of basic and applied scientific research on rivers. The journal publishes original scientific and technical papers on biological, ecological, geomorphological, hydrological, engineering and geographical aspects related to rivers in both the developed and developing world. Papers showing how basic studies and new science can be of use in applied problems associated with river management, regulation and restoration are encouraged as is interdisciplinary research concerned directly or indirectly with river management problems.
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