Shrinking Desert Channel Response to Increasing Human Interferences and Changing Natural Factors in the Upper Yellow River

Author:

Li Yongshan12,Jia Xiaopeng3ORCID,Wang Haibing4,Wang Jian1,Ma Qimin5

Affiliation:

1. School of City and Planning, Yancheng Teachers University, No. 2 Xiwangdadao South Road, Yancheng 224007, China

2. North Jiangsu Institute of Agricultural and Rural Modernization, Yancheng Teachers University, Yancheng 224007, China

3. Key Laboratory of Desert and Desertification, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, No. 320th Donggang West Road, Lanzhou 730000, China

4. College of Desert Control Science and Engineering, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University, No. 29 Ordos East Street, Hohhot 010011, China

5. College of Resources and Environment, Chengdu University of Information Technology, Chengdu 610225, China

Abstract

Many rivers are tightly coupled and intersected with aeolian sand dunes, whose geomorphological evolution involves not only fluvial processes but also aeolian processes that pose a new challenge to fluvial geomorphological studies. However, due to few field studies, our overall understanding of the desert channel geomorphic process is limited. In this paper, we present an outstanding example of desert river channel evolution regulated by aeolian–fluvial interactions in the Ulan Buh Desert of the Yellow River, based on a long time series data set (1966–2019) of channel cross-sections. The results indicate that the lateral addition of aeolian sand, the water–sediment relationship and human interference have a significant role at different periods of channel evolution. Before 1986, higher discharge, lower sediment content and greater intensity of aeolian activity caused aeolian–fluvial interactions and a relative scouring and silting balance in the channel, with little human activity. From 1986 to 2000, an increase in large reservoir operation, vegetation coverage and floodplain farming, coupled with water–sediment relationship variation, caused rapid deposition and shrinkage of the river channel. From 2000 to 2014, the channel kept a slight scouring state. With Haibowan reservoir operation beginning in 2014, the talweg experienced rapid scouring and undercut rebound. However, an expanding and stable floodplain accelerated sedimentation on the floodplain and weakened river lateral erosion, indicating that the channel has shown a shrinkage trend. Meanwhile, wavelet analysis results indicate that human interferences and aeolian activities have no significant role in the periodical characteristics of the channel’s longitudinal erosion and deposition. Therefore, on the whole, increasing human interferences and decreasing wind dynamics have driven this desert wandering channel to be stable, and to gradually form a new balance between erosion and sedimentation.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region for the Transformation of Scientific and Technological Achievements

High-level Innovative and Entrepreneurial Talent Introduction Program of Jiangsu Province

Alxa League Science and Technology Plan Project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

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