Sediment delivery to sustain the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta under climate change and anthropogenic impacts

Author:

Raff Jessica L.ORCID,Goodbred Steven L.ORCID,Pickering Jennifer L.ORCID,Sincavage Ryan S.,Ayers John C.ORCID,Hossain Md. Saddam,Wilson Carol A.,Paola ChrisORCID,Steckler Michael S.,Mondal Dhiman R.ORCID,Grimaud Jean-Louis,Grall Celine Jo,Rogers Kimberly G.,Ahmed Kazi Matin,Akhter Syed Humayun,Carlson Brandee N.,Chamberlain Elizabeth L.,Dejter Meagan,Gilligan Jonathan M.ORCID,Hale Richard P.ORCID,Khan Mahfuzur R.ORCID,Muktadir Md. GolamORCID,Rahman Md. Munsur,Williams Lauren A.

Abstract

AbstractThe principal nature-based solution for offsetting relative sea-level rise in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta is the unabated delivery, dispersal, and deposition of the rivers’ ~1 billion-tonne annual sediment load. Recent hydrological transport modeling suggests that strengthening monsoon precipitation in the 21st century could increase this sediment delivery 34-60%; yet other studies demonstrate that sediment could decline 15-80% if planned dams and river diversions are fully implemented. We validate these modeled ranges by developing a comprehensive field-based sediment budget that quantifies the supply of Ganges-Brahmaputra river sediment under varying Holocene climate conditions. Our data reveal natural responses in sediment supply comparable to previously modeled results and suggest that increased sediment delivery may be capable of offsetting accelerated sea-level rise. This prospect for a naturally sustained Ganges-Brahmaputra delta presents possibilities beyond the dystopian future often posed for this system, but the implementation of currently proposed dams and diversions would preclude such opportunities.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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