Title
River Mixing in the Amazon as a Driver of Concentration-Discharge Relationships
Date Issued
01 November 2017
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Bouchez J.
Martinez J.M.
Lagane C.
Filizola N.
Noriega L.
Pombosa R.
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Large hydrological systems aggregate compositionally different waters derived from a variety of pathways. In the case of continental-scale rivers, such aggregation occurs noticeably at confluences between tributaries. Here we explore how such aggregation can affect solute concentration-discharge (C-Q) relationships and thus obscure the message carried by these relationships in terms of weathering properties of the Critical Zone. We build up a simple model for tributary mixing to predict the behavior of C-Q relationships during aggregation. We test a set of predictions made in the context of the largest world's river, the Amazon. In particular, we predict that the C-Q relationships of the rivers draining heterogeneous catchments should be the most “dilutional” and should display the widest hysteresis loops. To check these predictions, we compute 10 day-periodicity time series of Q and major solute (Si, Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, Na+, Cl-, SO2-4) C and fluxes (F) for 13 gauging stations located throughout the Amazon basin. In agreement with the model predictions, C-Q relationships of most solutes shift from a fairly “chemostatic” behavior (nearly constant C) at the Andean mountain front and in pure lowland areas, to more “dilutional” patterns (negative C-Q relationship) toward the system mouth. More prominent C-Q hysteresis loops are also observed at the most downstream stations. Altogether, this study suggests that mixing of water and solutes between different flowpaths exerts a strong control on C-Q relationships of large-scale hydrological systems.
Start page
8660
End page
8685
Volume
53
Issue
11
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas
Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85033440900
Source
Water Resources Research
ISSN of the container
00431397
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus