J. Deng

and 4 more

Clogging of gravel-bed rivers is a major issue for fish and macro-invertebrate habitats as well as for groundwater-river exchanges. River clogging consists mainly of the deposition and infiltration of fine sediments within the bed matrix, which is a natural phenomenon but can be enhanced by human activities. Although there are several methods for estimating the degree of clogging, quantitative assessment of clogging remains challenging, not to mention the lack of comparison between these methods. We therefore implemented three quantitative methods for estimating clogging (bed material sampling, infiltration test, and interstitial water sampling), and assessed their effectiveness and suitability for application as a long-term monitoring solution. These methods were applied to a natural river bed characterised by high spatial heterogeneity of clogging. The results show good correlations between the different methods despite some scatter that can be linked to limitations of some methodologies in term of sampling itself or sampling depth. Indeed, sampling of the bed material using a McNeil sampler is limited to the first 15 cm below the surface, whereas the infiltration test or interstitial water pumping using a standpipe can be achieved for a depth deeper than 15 cm only. The infiltration test appears to be effective for relatively low clogging, while interstitial water sampling is more efficient for high clogging. The results also show that dissolved oxygen estimation alone may not be sufficient to accurately estimate physical clogging, particularly for cases of low clogging. However, it appears to be a good and simple complementary method to the interstitial water-sediment pumping method. The infiltration test and interstitial water-sediment sampling are simple, quick and easy to apply methods. The two methods are complementary, and suitable for a spatial clogging assessment, with the possibility of investigating a wide range of clogging degrees.

thollet fabien

and 6 more

The present dataset is related to the Arc-Isère long-term environmental research part of the Rhône Basin Long Term Environmental Research Observatory. This alpine watershed located in the French Alps is characterized by high Suspended Particulate Matter (SPM) in very anthropogenized valleys. Suspended Sediment Concentrations (SSC) naturally observed in the river are very high, ranging from a few tens of milligrams per litre at low flow to tens of grams per litre during major natural hydrological events (floods, debris flows) or river dam hydraulic flushes. One research objective related to this site aims at better understanding the SSC dynamics along the river using a system of nested watersheds (Arvan, Arc, and Isère) in order to access to both temporal and spatial dynamics. Studies using this dataset are on the quantification of fine sediment fluxes but also on the related morphological changes due to fine sediment deposition or resuspension. Additionally, the observatory database can support studies on contaminants (either dissolved or particulate contaminant). Six hydro sedimentary stations monitor SSC with high frequency via turbidity sensors associated to automatic samplers. Discharge is measured via classical water level measurements and a rating curve. The oldest station (Grenoble-campus) started recording data from 2006 while others hydro-sedimentary stations were built from 2009 to 2011. Data are available in an online data website called “Base de Données des Observatoires en Hydrologie” (Hydrological observatory database, https://bdoh.irstea.fr/ARC-ISERE/) with DOI references for each site. The hydrological and sediment transport time series are stored, managed and made available to a wide community in order to be used at their full extent. This database is used as a data exchange tool for both scientists and operational end-users and as an online tool to compute integrated fluxes.