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Research papers

Forty years' channel change on the Yongdinghe River, China: patterns and causes

, , , , &
Pages 183-193 | Received 09 Apr 2015, Accepted 07 Nov 2015, Published online: 10 Mar 2016
 

ABSTRACT

In the last 40 years, the Beijing section of the Yongdinghe River evolved from a perennial and wandering river reach to a channellized and fragmentation dry river channel. Such changes threatened the local safety, eco-environment health, and economy development. In order to clarify the channel change patterns and its mechanisms, the spatial and temporal changes of the river channel and the causes are analysed. The results show that the river channel was greatly reshaped by the intensive land using, with a total of 66.95 km2 degraded area including the overflow land, water area, and agricultural land. The overflow land was mainly changed to dry riverbed, agricultural land, water conservancy construction land, planted woodland, and bare land. The water area was mainly replaced by dry riverbed, channellized watercourse, water conservancy construction land, and agricultural land. Agricultural land was mainly changed to residential land, dry riverbed, and bare land. The abrupt river runoff and sediment change after construction of the Guanting Reservoir (the largest reservoir in the Yongdinghe River) indicates a potential trigger for the river channel changes. The river channel change processes are finally concluded: before 1980, the large number of the water conservancy projects' construction including the reservoirs, check dams, and sluice in the Guanting Gorge (upstream of the study river reach) changed the river connectivity and the flow continuity of the upstream river channel. Together with the water use, the soil and water conservation activities, and the variable precipitation, almost all the runoff and sediment to the study river reach were intercepted; then the perennial dry up river and the increased land requirement impelled people to occupy the downstream river space.

Acknowledgements

We are profoundly grateful to Professor Xiaohua Shen from Zhejiang University for carefully reviewing the manuscript and providing valuable advice. We also thank East View Cartographic, Inc. for providing the CORONA satellite images.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

We would like to acknowledge the financial support of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant numbers 41440010 and 41101401], the Key Innovation Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [grant number KZCX1-YW-08-03], and the Non-profit Research Program of the Ministry of Water Resource [grant number 201101015].

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