Perilous Future for River Deltas

Q1 Earth and Planetary Sciences
GSA Today Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1130/gsatg566a.1
Bilal U. Haq, J. Milliman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

River deltas occupy only ~0.65% of Earth’s land surface, but collectively house ~4.5% of the global population and account for more than 6% of the global GDP. Because of ongoing human interventions in the past century (river diversions, ground-water and petroleum extraction, and urbanization), deltas are coming under additional and intense threat from climate change and the impending sea-level rise. Many high-latitude and tropical deltas where population pressure is low and human modification is minimal face less peril for the foreseeable future, but densely populated deltas, especially those in Asia with extreme urbanization and environmental pressures, will be more susceptible to land loss and drowning. Here we consider six key del-tas—Mississippi, Yangtze, Niger, Bengal, Nile, and Indus—emphasizing recent findings and consensus as to their health and how human activities have brought these vulnerable ecosystems perilously close to or beyond the point of no return.
德尔塔河的危险未来
河流三角洲仅占地球陆地面积的0.65%,但总人口约占全球人口的4.5%,占全球GDP的6%以上。由于过去一个世纪不断进行的人类干预(河流改道、地下水和石油开采以及城市化),三角洲正受到气候变化和即将到来的海平面上升的额外而严重的威胁。在可预见的未来,许多人口压力低、人类改造最小的高纬度和热带三角洲面临的危险较小,但人口稠密的三角洲,特别是那些城市化和环境压力极端的亚洲三角洲,将更容易遭受土地损失和淹没。在这里,我们考虑了六个关键的三角洲——密西西比河、长江、尼日尔、孟加拉、尼罗河和印度河——强调了最近的发现和共识,即它们的健康,以及人类活动如何使这些脆弱的生态系统危险地接近或超过了不可回头的地步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
GSA Today
GSA Today Earth and Planetary Sciences-Geology
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
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