Hydrodynamic Modeling and Simulation of Water Residence Time in the Estuary of the Lower Amazon River

Studies about the hydrodynamic behavior in the lower Amazon River remain scarce, despite their relevance and complexity, and the Water Residence Time (Rt) of this Amazonian estuary remains poorly unknown. Therefore, the present study aims to numerically simulate three seasonal Rt scenarios based on...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carlos Henrique M. de Abreu, Maria de Lourdes Cavalcanti Barros, Daímio Chaves Brito, Marcelo Rassy Teixeira, Alan Cavalcanti da Cunha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-02-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/3/660
Description
Summary:Studies about the hydrodynamic behavior in the lower Amazon River remain scarce, despite their relevance and complexity, and the Water Residence Time (Rt) of this Amazonian estuary remains poorly unknown. Therefore, the present study aims to numerically simulate three seasonal Rt scenarios based on a calibrated hydrodynamic numerical model (SisbaHiA) applied to a representative stretch of the lower Amazon River. The following methodological steps were performed: a) establishing experimental water flow in natural channels; b) statistically test numerical predictions (tidal range cycles for different hydrologic periods); and c) simulating velocity fields and water discharge associated with Rt numerical outputs of the hydrodynamic model varied from 14≤ Rt ≤ 22 days among different seasonal periods. This change has shown the significant influence of hydrologic period and geomorphological features on Rt. Rt, in its turn, has shown significant spatial heterogeneity, depending on location and stretch of the channels. Comparative analyses between simulated and experimental parameters evidenced statistical correlations higher than 0.9. We conclude that the generated Rt scenarios were consistent with other similar studies in the literature. Therefore, they depicted the applicability of the hydrodynamics to the conservation of the Amazonian aquatic ecosystem, as well as its relevance for biochemical and pollutant dispersion studies, which still remain scarce in the literature.
ISSN:2073-4441