Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/36249
Type: Conference paper
Title: Changing fluxes of sediments and salts as recorded in lower River Murray wetlands, Australia
Author: Gell, P.
Fluin, J.
Tibby, J.
Haynes, D.
Khanum, S.
Walsh, B.
Hancock, G.
Harrison, J.
Zawadzki, A.
Little, F.
Citation: Sediment dynamics and the hydromorphology of fluvial systems / John S. Rowan, Robert W. Duck & Alan Werritty (eds.):pp.416-424
Publisher: IAHS
Publisher Place: UK
Issue Date: 2006
Series/Report no.: IAHS publication; 306
ISBN: 1901502686
978-1-901502-68-8
ISSN: 0144-7815
Conference Name: Sediment Dynamics & the Hydromorphology of Fluvial Systems (2 Jul 2006 - 7 Jul 2006 : Dundee, Scotland)
Editor: Rowan, J.
Duck, R.
Werritty, A.
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Peter Gell, Jennie Fluin, John Tibby, Deborah Haynes, Syeda Ifteaa Khanum, Brendan Walsh, Gary Hancock, Jennifer Harrison, Atun Zawadzki and Fiona Little
Abstract: The River Murray basin, Australia's largest, has been significantly impacted by changed flow regimes and increased fluxes of salts and sediments since settlement in the 1840s. The river's flood plain hosts an array of cut-off meanders, levee lakes and basin depression lakes that archive historical changes. Pre-European sedimentation rates are typically approx. 0.1-1 mm year-1, while those in the period after European arrival are typically 10 to 30 fold greater. This increased sedimentation corresponds to a shift in wetland trophic state from submerged macrophytes in clear waters to phytoplankton-dominated, turbid systems. There is evidence for a decline in sedimentation in some natural wetlands after river regulation from the 1920s, but with the maintenance of the phytoplankton state. Fossil diatom assemblages reveal that, while some wetlands had saline episodes before settlement, others became saline after, and as early as the 1880s. The oxidation of sulphurous salts deposited after regulation has induced hyperacidity in a number of wetlands in recent years. While these wetlands are rightly perceived as being heavily impacted, other, once open water systems, that have infilled and now support rich macrophyte beds, are used as interpretive sites. The rate of filling, however, suggests that the lifespan of these wetlands is short. The rate of wetland loss through such increased infilling is unlikely to be matched by future scouring as regulation has eliminated middle order floods from the lower catchment.
Description: Proceedings of conference held in Dundee, Scotland, 2-7 July 2006
Description (link): http://books.google.com/books?id=FV8AkHo1QI4C&pg=PA566&dq=1901502686&sig=5TDDhJKI7JpRiWT1hxKfjZNIhMs#PPP11,M1
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Environment Institute publications
Geography, Environment and Population publications

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