Temporal and spatial adjustments of channel migration and planform geometry: Responses to ENSO driven climate anomalies on the tropical freely-meandering Aguapeí River, São Paulo, Brazil

Two reaches of Aguapeí River, a left-bank tributary of the Paraná River in western São Paulo state, Brazil, were studied with the objective of assessing the role of bend curvature on channel migration in this wet-tropical system and examining if land-use changes or ENSO (El Niño Southern Oscillation...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Suizu, Taina, Nanson, Gerald C
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Research Online 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/5254
Description
Summary:Two reaches of Aguapeí River, a left-bank tributary of the Paraná River in western São Paulo state, Brazil, were studied with the objective of assessing the role of bend curvature on channel migration in this wet-tropical system and examining if land-use changes or ENSO (El Niño Southern Oscillation) driven climate anomalies over nearly half a century have changed migration behaviour and planform geometry. Meander-bend migration rates and morphometric parameters including meander-bend curvature, sinuosity, meander wavelength and channel width, were measured and the frequency of bend cutoffs was analysed in order to determine the rate of change of channel adjustment over a 48year period to 2010. Results show that maximum average channel migration rates occur in bends with curvatures of about 2-3 r c /w, similar to other previously studied temperate and subarctic freely meandering rivers although not as pronounced and with a tendency to favour tighter curvature. From 1962 to 2010 the Aguapeí River has undergone a significant reduction in sinuosity, a shift from tightly curving to more open bends, an overall decline in channel migration rates, an associated decrease in the frequency of neck-cutoffs and an overall increase in channel width. As the majority of the drainage basin (96%) was already deforested in 1962, channel form and process changes were, unlike an interpretation for an adjacent river system, not attributed to altered land-use but rather to a sharp ENSO-driven increase in the magnitude of peak flow-discharges of some 32% since 1972. In summary, this research revealed that recent climate and associated flow regime changes are having a pronounced effect on river channel behaviour in the Aguapeí River investigated here.