Analyses of suspended sediment loads in Slovenian rivers |
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Authors: | Nejc Bezak Mojca ?raj Matja? Miko? |
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Institution: | 1. Faculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenianejc.bezak@fgg.uni-lj.si;3. Faculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTSuspended solids are present in every river, but high quantities can worsen the ecological conditions of streams; therefore, effective monitoring and analysis of this hydrological variable are necessary. Frequency, seasonality, inter-correlation, extreme events, trends and lag analyses were carried out for peaks of suspended sediment concentration (SSC) and discharge (Q) data from Slovenian streams using officially monitored data from 1955 to 2006 that were made available by the Slovenian Environment Agency. In total more than 500 station-years of daily Q and SSC data were used. No uniform (positive or negative) trend was found in the SSC series; however, all the statistically significant trends were decreasing. No generalization is possible for the best fit distribution function. A seasonality analysis showed that most of the SSC peaks occurred in the summer (short-term intense convective precipitation produced by thunderstorms) and in the autumn (prolonged frontal precipitation). Correlations between Q and SSC values were generally relatively small (Pearson correlation coefficient values from 0.05 to 0.59), which means that the often applied Q–SSC curves should be used with caution when estimating annual suspended sediment loads. On average, flood peak Q occurred after the corresponding SSC peak (clockwise-positive hysteresis loops), but the average lag time was rather small (less than 1 day). Editor M.C. Acreman; Associate editor Y. Gyasi-Agyei |
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Keywords: | suspended sediment load frequency analysis seasonality extreme events trends lag analysis |
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