Document Type

Article

Department/Program

Virginia Institute of Marine Science

Publication Date

2005

Journal

TERRESTRIAL ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC SCIENCES

Volume

16

Issue

3

First Page

653

Last Page

675

Abstract

Small drainage basins, highly fractured rock, high relief, and steep gradients make Taiwan watersheds particularly sensitive to episodic events such as typhoons and earthquakes, and to various types of anthropogenic disturbance. Here we analyze the characteristics of a long-term hydrological dataset from Taiwan and re-evaluate methods used to calculate sediment loads for Taiwan's event-driven rivers. We suggest using the rating curve method stratified down to seasonal levels to reflect the rapid changes in the relationship between water discharge and suspended sediment load. A program is developed to determine the optimal time-interval for constructing rating curves, and is used to calculate hourly, daily, yearly, and long-term mean suspended sediment loads. Seasonal rating curves applied to hourly discharges are particularly critical to calculate sediment fluxes and concentrations in response to episodic events, particularly typhoons. The calculated cumulative long-term mean sediment fluxes for the Jhou-Shuei and Bei-Nan Rivers are considerably smaller than those calculated using monthly weighted average (MWA) method (Dadson et al. 2003). The MWA method likely over-estimates the mean load due to more frequent sediment observations during high-flow events.

Keywords

PARTICULATE ORGANIC-CARBON; RATING CURVES; LANYANG-HSI; LOADS; DISCHARGE; TRANSPORT; DELIVERY; VARIABILITY; CALIFORNIA; EROSION

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