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Discharge indices such as effective discharge, fraction-load discharge, and functional-equivalent discharge are
used to quantify the effectiveness of flow distribution in sediment transport through a river network. Effective
discharge is a well-defined discharge index that is used to quantify the flow which carries the maximum amount
of sediments over a long time. The fraction-load discharge is that discharge above which a fraction of the longterm sediment load is transported. The functional-equivalent discharge is that discharge that will reproduce the
magnitude of the sediment load generated by the full hydrologic distribution assuming it occurred at all times.
Magnitude-Frequency Analysis is generally used as a mathematical framework to determine these indices. In
MFA, these indices are computed based on the transport effectiveness function which is constructed by using the
product of assumed probability distribution (e.g., lognormal or Gamma) for discharge, and the power-law
relationship between discharge and sediment transport rate. Mathematically, the effective discharge represents a
magnitude of discharge for which the transport effectiveness function attains a maximum value. The other two
discharge indices i.e., fraction-load discharge and functional-equivalent discharge are determined based on mean
sediment load which is calculated by integrating the transport effectiveness function over the complete range of
flows. Conventionally, the transport effectiveness function is constructed by assuming the discharges to be
lognormally or Gamma distributed. However, the assumption of discharge distribution is location-specific, and
hence lognormally or Gamma distributed discharges are not valid for all catchments. Thus, it is necessary to
assess the uncertainty in the estimates of these indices when the discharge data do not follow either the
lognormal or Gamma distribution. In this study, modified approaches are proposed to determine discharge
indices for the general distribution of discharge datasets. The proposed approach utilizes a one-parameter BoxCox transformation to transform the discharge data. Analytical expressions for effective discharge and mean
sediment load under the proposed framework are derived. The robustness of the proposed approach is
established through a Monte Carlo simulation experiment by generating discharge data from various probability
distributions such as lognormal, Gamma, and log Pearson type III distributions. Furthermore, the proposed
approaches are applied to estimate discharge indices for catchments in South Indian Rivers (Mahanadi,
Godavari, Krishna, and Cauvery). The influence of the hysteresis effect due to seasonal variation and stage
tendency in the sediment rating curve is also studied. It was observed that grouping the rating-curve data
according to seasonal variation and stage tendency resulted in reliable sediment rating relations. Subsequently,
the estimates of discharge indices based on the proposed approach are computed considering various sediment
rating relationships fitted for total, seasonal, stage, and season-stage based datasets. Finally, the dependence of
discharge indices (and their return period) on various catchment descriptors such as average slope, basin relief,
drainage area, maximum elevation, and mean elevation is explored. |
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