An assessment of South American sediment fluxes under climate changes

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Jun 25:879:163056. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163056. Epub 2023 Mar 27.

Abstract

Climate change can affect all levels of society and the planet. Recent studies have shown its effects on sediment fluxes in several locations worldwide, which can impact ecosystems and infrastructure such as reservoirs. In this study, we focused on simulating sediment fluxes using projections of future climate change for South America (SA), a continent with a high sediment transport rate to the oceans. Here, we used four climate change data yielded by the Eta Regional Climate Model: Eta-BESM, Eta-CanESM2, Eta-HadGEM2-ES, and Eta-MIROC5. In addition, it was evaluated the RCP4.5 greenhouse gas emissions scenario from CMIP5, which represents a moderate scenario. Climate change data between 1961 and 1995 (past) and 2021 and 2055 (future) were used to simulate and compare changes that may occur in water and sediment fluxes using the hydrological-hydrodynamic and sediment model MGB-SED AS. The Eta climate projections provided input data to MGB-SED AS model, such as precipitation, air surface temperature, incident solar radiation, relative humidity, wind speed, and atmospheric pressure. Our results showed sediment fluxes are expected to reduce (increase) in north-central (south-central) SA. While a sediment transport (QST) increase >30 % might occur, a 28 % decrease is expected to occur in the water discharge for the main SA basins. The most significant QST reductions were estimated for the Doce (-54 %), Tocantins (-49 %), and Xingu (-34 %) rivers, while the most significant increases were estimated for the Upper Paraná (409 %), Juruá (46 %), and Uruguay (40 %) rivers. We also observed that different climate change signals over large basins can impact the river water composition, which could lead to a new composition of the Amazon basin waters in the future, accompanied by a significant increase in sediment concentration.

Keywords: Continental-scale modeling; Eta; Future environmental changes; Sediment transport.