4.7 Article

Towards the assessment of sediment connectivity in a large Himalayan river basin

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 661, Issue -, Pages 251-265

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.01.118

Keywords

Sediment dynamics; Structural connectivity; Index of connectivity; Large rivers; Himalaya

Funding

  1. Australia aid program
  2. Alexander von Humboldt fellowship at University of Potsdam, Germany

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Sediment connectivity, defined as the degree of linkage between the sediment sources to downstream areas, is one of the most important properties that control landscape evolution in river basins. The degree of linkages amongst different parts of a catchment depends mainly on the hinterland characteristics (e.g. catchment morphology, slope, shape, relief, and elevation), channel characteristics (e.g. slope, stream network density, valley confinement), and the combined effects of vegetation (e.g. land use changes and land abandonment). This paper evaluates the sediment connectivity of the upper Kosi basin covering an area of similar to 52,731 km(2) including Tibet and Nepal at different spatial scales. We have computed the index of connectivity (IC) using the equations originally proposed by Borselli et al. (2008) andmodified by Cavalli et al. (2013) to evaluate the potential connection of sediment source areas to the primary channel network as well to the catchment outlet. Our results highlight significant spatial variability in sediment connectivity across the basin and provide important insights on structural sediment dynamics in a complex geological and geomorphological setting. We compare our results with the observed sediment load data at certain outlets and demonstrate that sediment flux in different subbasins is controlled by variable slope distribution and land use and land cover that are strongly related to the structural connectivity. We argue that IC model can be extremely beneficial to understand sediment dynamics at catchment scale in a large river basin (similar to 10(3)-10(4) km(2) scale), where systematic field investigations for mapping hillslope-channel linkages are not feasible. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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