Hydrodynamic and geomorphic adjustments of channel bars in the Yichang-Chenglingji Reach of the Middle Yangtze River in response to the Three Gorges Dam operation

2020 
Abstract The evolution of channel bars in response to upstream damming has significant impacts on channel stability, navigation, and aquatic habitats. Here, the effects of the Three Gorges Dam (TGD) operation on downstream channel bars in the Yichang-Chenglingji Reach (YCR) were comprehensively analyzed using remote sensing images, cross-sectional profiles, and hydrological datasets. The morphodynamic adjustments of channel bars in the YCR were significantly different during the pre- and post-TGD periods (i.e., before and after the construction of the TGD). Specifically, the total area of channel bars did not exhibit any significant trend in the pre-TGD period, but displayed a significant reduction following the construction of the TGD, although the morphodynamic response of each sub-reach was different. The channel bars in the YCR were relatively stable in the pre-TGD period, but became more erodible in the post-TGD period. The length/width ratio (LWR) of the bars showed an overall increase trend during the whole period from 1992 to 2017, not changing before and after the dam construction. The water discharge that led to the greatest channel bars adjustment was 27,000–30,000 m3/s (corresponding to bankfull discharge) in the pre-TGD period and 15,000–18,000 m3/s (corresponding to the medium discharge that can submerge the surface of the bars) in the post-TGD period. In addition, the grain size of non-uniform sediment with the highest replenishment degree gradually reduced downstream; these finer sediments were the main sources of material for the channel bars in the YCR. Quantitative relationships between bars area, the most effective bar-forming discharge and suspended sediment load with the highest replenishment degree, were proposed based on the improved Delayed Response Model (DRM). Results indicate that geomorphic adjustments of channel bars in the YCR are closely related to the previous four-year flow and sediment regimes, implying a delayed response of the fluvial system to damming.
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