Quantifying the impacts of climate change and human activities on runoff and suspended sediment load in the Lhasa River Basin, Tibetan Plateau

Author:

Zhang Wenduo123,Zhao Dongmei123,Zhang Baojun12,Xiong Donghong124ORCID,Liu Lin123,Qin Xiaomin123,Rai Dil Kumar23ORCID,Laraib Sheikh123,Wang Xiaodan15,Deng Wei16

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences Chengdu China

2. State Key Laboratory of Mountain Hazards and Engineering Resilience Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences Chengdu China

3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. Branch of Sustainable Mountain Development, Kathmandu Center for Research and Education, CAS‐TU Kathmandu Nepal

5. Key Laboratory of Tibetan Plateau Earth System, Environment and Resources Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

6. College of Geography and Resources Science Sichuan Normal University Chengdu China

Abstract

AbstractQuantifying the attribution of climate change and human activities on runoff and suspended sediment load is crucial for formulating future watershed management measures, especially in the ecologically fragile alpine region, which is more susceptible to climate change and human activities. In this study, the temporal changes in runoff‐suspended sediment load and the potential impact factors (i.e., precipitation, potential evapotranspiration (PET), land use/land cover change (LULC) and reservoir operation) were investigated in the Lhasa River Basin (LRB) from 1956 to 2020. In addition, the contributions of those factors to the changes in runoff and suspended sediment load were quantitatively evaluated based on physically‐based Soil and Water Assessment Tools (SWAT). The results indicated that annual runoff and suspended sediment load showed an increasing but insignificant trend during 1956–2020, while annual precipitation and PET showed a significant increasing trend at a rate of 0.94 and 1.07 mm/yr, respectively. LULC mainly presented an increase in forestland area followed by a decrease in grassland and bare land area due to the implementation of ecological projects. Runoff and suspended sediment load changed abruptly at approximately 1995 and 2005 based on three abrupt change identification methods, thus, the study period was further divided into three substages: baseline period (P0, 1956–1994), dramatically increased period (P1, 1995–2004) and slightly decreased period (P2, 2005–2020). The attribution analysis showed that climate change was the dominant contributor to runoff and suspended sediment load increments during P1. LULC caused the decline in runoff and suspended sediment load in both P1 and P2, with their contribution increasing significantly from 0.40% and 4.73% in P1 to 50.24% and 51.79% in P2, respectively. Reservoir operation was the second key factor in runoff and suspended sediment load reduction in P2, contributing 42.07% and 43.72%, respectively. These findings provide the scientific foundation for reasonably allocating water resources and statistical support for the benefit evaluation of implementing ecological projects in the basin.

Publisher

Wiley

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