4.6 Article

The Response of Turbidity Maximum to Peak River Discharge in a Macrotidal Estuary

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13010106

Keywords

estuary; turbidity maximum; peak river discharge; stratification; spring-neap modulation; recovery time; FVCOM

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41876088]
  2. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation, China [ZR2019MD010]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, China [201913020]

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The study examines the response of the Ou River Estuary's estuarine turbidity maximum (ETM) to rapidly varying river discharge, with peak river discharge diluting the ETM but causing more seabed sediment resuspension. The mechanisms during peak river discharge can contribute to studies on morphological evolution and pollutant flushing.
The Ou River, a medium-sized river in the southeastern China, is examined to study the estuarine turbidity maximum (ETM) response to rapidly varied river discharge, i.e., peak river discharge (PRD). This study analyzes the difference in ETM and sediment transport mechanisms between low-discharge and PRD during neap and spring tides by using the Finite-Volume Community Ocean Model. The three-dimensional model is validated by in-situ measurements from 23 April to 22 May 2007. In the Ou River Estuary (ORE), ETM is generally induced by the convergence between river runoff and density-driven flow. The position of ETM for neap and spring tides is similar, but the suspended sediment concentration during spring tide is stronger than that during neap tide. The sediment source of ETM is mainly derived from the resuspension of the seabed. PRD, compared with low-discharge, can dilute the ETM, but cause more sediment to be resuspended from the seabed. The ETM is more seaward during PRD. After PRD, the larger the peak discharge, the longer the recovery time will be. Moreover, the river sediment supply helps shorten ETM recovery time. Mechanisms for this ETM during a PRD can contribute to studies of morphological evolution and pollutant flushing.

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