scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

Aldo Sottolichio

Bio: Aldo Sottolichio is an academic researcher from University of Bordeaux. The author has contributed to research in topics: Estuary & Sediment. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 89 publications receiving 1354 citations. Previous affiliations of Aldo Sottolichio include Centre national de la recherche scientifique.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, two turbidity peaks were identified in Gironde estuary waters, possibly related to a mud-trapping zone in the main channel and the actual turbidity maximum, capable of shifting seasonally along the estuary.
Abstract: Two turbidity peaks can be identified in the Gironde estuary waters. The first one, in a steady position, is possibly related to a mud-trapping zone in the main channel. The second one is the actual turbidity maximum, capable of shifting seasonally along the estuary. Its length and position can be readily predicted as functions of the river flow. Fluid mud presents a similar seasonal pattern, but its occurrence is sensitive to the channel cross-section, especially to its width, which modifies local hydrodynamics and water-bottom exchanges. These observations allow accurate prediction of mud deposition zones according to the season.

112 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified the nadir altimetry performance over a medium river (200m or lower wide) with a pluvio-nival regime in a temperate climate (the Garonne River, France).

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied sedimentation in three canyons of the Bay of Biscay (Audierne, Blackmud and Capbreton) by the combined analysis of cores and current meter data collected over a 7 month period.

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the Gironde Estuary, the gas transfer velocity (k) is driven by a combination of two major physical drivers, wind and water current as mentioned in this paper, and values of k increased with wind speed and were significantly greater when water currents and wind were in opposing directions.
Abstract: In estuaries, the gas transfer velocity (k) is driven by a combination of two major physical drivers, wind and water current. The k values for CO2 in the macrotidal Gironde Estuary were obtained from 159 simultaneous pCO2 and floating chamber flux measurements. Values of k increased with wind speed and were significantly greater when water currents and wind were in opposing directions. At low wind speeds ( 0.2 g L �1 ) had a significant role in attenuating turbulence and therefore gas exchange. This result has important consequences for modeling water oxygenation in estuarine turbidity maxima. For seven low turbidity estuaries previously described in the literature, the slope of the linear regression between k and wind speed correlates very well with the estuary surface area due to a fetch effect. In the Gironde Estuary, this slope follows the same trend at low turbidity (TSS < 0.2 g L �1 ), but is on average significantly lower than in other large estuaries and

78 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of tide and river flow on turbidity in the Gironde fluvial estuary is detailed, focusing on dynamics related to changes in hydrological conditions (river floods, periods of low discharge, interannual changes).
Abstract: . Climate change and human activities impact the volume and timing of freshwater input to estuaries. These modifications in fluvial discharges are expected to influence estuarine suspended sediment dynamics, and in particular the turbidity maximum zone (TMZ). Located in southwest France, the Gironde fluvial-estuarine system has an ideal context to address this issue. It is characterized by a very pronounced TMZ, a decrease in mean annual runoff in the last decade, and it is quite unique in having a long-term and high-frequency monitoring of turbidity. The effect of tide and river flow on turbidity in the fluvial estuary is detailed, focusing on dynamics related to changes in hydrological conditions (river floods, periods of low discharge, interannual changes). Turbidity shows hysteresis loops at different timescales: during river floods and over the transitional period between the installation and expulsion of the TMZ. These hysteresis patterns, that reveal the origin of sediment, locally resuspended or transported from the watershed, may be a tool to evaluate the presence of remained mud. Statistics on turbidity data bound the range of river flow that promotes the upstream migration of TMZ in the fluvial stations. Whereas the duration of the low discharge period mainly determines the TMZ persistence, the freshwater volume during high discharge periods explains the TMZ concentration at the following dry period. The evolution of these two hydrological indicators of TMZ persistence and turbidity level since 1960 confirms the effect of discharge decrease on the intensification of the TMZ in tidal rivers; both provide a tool to evaluate future scenarios.

77 citations


Cited by
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Preface to the Princeton Landmarks in Biology Edition vii Preface xi Symbols used xiii 1.
Abstract: Preface to the Princeton Landmarks in Biology Edition vii Preface xi Symbols Used xiii 1. The Importance of Islands 3 2. Area and Number of Speicies 8 3. Further Explanations of the Area-Diversity Pattern 19 4. The Strategy of Colonization 68 5. Invasibility and the Variable Niche 94 6. Stepping Stones and Biotic Exchange 123 7. Evolutionary Changes Following Colonization 145 8. Prospect 181 Glossary 185 References 193 Index 201

14,171 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a 57-year hindcast (1953-2009) obtained with a spectral wave model forced with reanalysis wind fields was used to investigate the variability in the North-East Atlantic Ocean (25°W-0°W and 30°N-60° N).

328 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Jan 2014-Nature
TL;DR: Wetland carbon export is potentially large enough to account for at least the 0.21 petagrams of carbon emitted per year as CO2 from the central Amazon River and its floodplains, suggesting a substantial fraction of CO2 evasion from inland waters.
Abstract: River systems connect the terrestrial biosphere, the atmosphere and the ocean in the global carbon cycle1. A recent estimate suggests that up to 3 petagrams of carbon per year could be emitted as carbon dioxide (CO2) from global inland waters, offsetting the carbon uptake by terrestrial ecosystems2. It is generally assumed that inland waters emit carbon that has been previously fixed upstream by land plant photosynthesis, then transferred to soils, and subsequently transported downstream in run-off. But at the scale of entire drainage basins, the lateral carbon fluxes carried by small rivers upstream do not account for all of the CO2 emitted from inundated areas downstream3, 4. Three-quarters of the world's flooded land consists of temporary wetlands5, but the contribution of these productive ecosystems6 to the inland water carbon budget has been largely overlooked. Here we show that wetlands pump large amounts of atmospheric CO2 into river waters in the floodplains of the central Amazon. Flooded forests and floating vegetation export large amounts of carbon to river waters and the dissolved CO2 can be transported dozens to hundreds of kilometres downstream before being emitted. We estimate that Amazonian wetlands export half of their gross primary production to river waters as dissolved CO2 and organic carbon, compared with only a few per cent of gross primary production exported in upland (not flooded) ecosystems1, 7. Moreover, we suggest that wetland carbon export is potentially large enough to account for at least the 0.21 petagrams of carbon emitted per year as CO2 from the central Amazon River and its floodplains8. Global carbon budgets should explicitly address temporary or vegetated flooded areas, because these ecosystems combine high aerial primary production with large, fast carbon export, potentially supporting a substantial fraction of CO2 evasion from inland waters.

300 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The persistence of mangroves implies an ability to cope with moderately high rates of relative sea-level rise, however, many human pressures threaten mangrove extent, resulting in a continuing decline in their extent throughout the tropics.
Abstract: Mangroves occur on upper intertidal shorelines in the tropics and subtropics. Complex hydrodynamic and salinity conditions, related primarily to elevation and hydroperiod, influence mangrove distributions; this review considers how these distributions change over time. Accumulation rates of allochthonous and autochthonous sediment, both inorganic and organic, vary between and within different settings. Abundant terrigenous sediment can form dynamic mudbanks, and tides redistribute sediment, contrasting with mangrove peat in sediment-starved carbonate settings. Sediments underlying mangroves sequester carbon but also contain paleoenvironmental records of adjustments to past sea-level changes. Radiometric dating indicates long-term sedimentation, whereas measurements made using surface elevation tables and marker horizons provide shorter perspectives, indicating shallow subsurface processes of root growth and substrate autocompaction. Many tropical deltas also experience deep subsidence, which augments relative sea-level rise. The persistence of mangroves implies an ability to cope with moderately high rates of relative sea-level rise. However, many human pressures threaten mangroves, resulting in a continuing decline in their extent throughout the tropics.

296 citations

01 Dec 2006
TL;DR: In this article, an ecomorphodynamic model was proposed to investigate the response of tidal morphologies to different scenarios of sediment supply, colonization by halophytes, and changing sea level.
Abstract: We propose an ecomorphodynamic model which conceptualizes the chief land-forming processes operating on the intertwined, long-term evolution of marsh platforms and embedded tidal networks. The rapid network incision (previously addressed by the authors) is decoupled from the geomorphological dynamics of intertidal areas, governed by sediment erosion and deposition and crucially affected by the presence of vegetation. This allows us to investigate the response of tidal morphologies to different scenarios of sediment supply, colonization by halophytes, and changing sea level. Different morphological evolutionary regimes are shown to depend on marsh ecology. Marsh accretion rates, enhanced by vegetation growth, and the related platform elevations tend to decrease with distance from the creek, measured along suitably defined flow paths. The negative feedback between surface elevation and its inorganic accretion rate is reinforced by the relation between plant productivity and soil elevation in Spartina-dominated marshes and counteracted by positive feedbacks in multispecies-vegetated marshes. When evolving under constant sea level, unvegetated and Spartina-dominated marshes asymptotically tend to mean high water level (MHWL), different from multiple vegetation species marshes, which can make the evolutionary transition to upland. Equilibrium configurations below MHWL can be reached under constant rates of sea level rise, depending on sediment supply and vegetation productivity. Our analyses on marine regressions and transgressions show that when the system is in a supply-limited regime, network retreat and expansion (associated with regressions and transgressions, respectively) tend to be cyclic. Conversely, in a transport-limited regime, network reexpansion following a regression tends to take on a new configuration, showing a hysteretic behavior. Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.

276 citations