排水沟迁移及其对气候和生物多样性的影响

Chuanqi He, Jean Braun, Hui Tang, Xiaoping Yuan, Esteban Acevedo-Trejos, Richard F. Ott, Gaia Stucky de Quay
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摘要

排水系统将地球表面分割成不同的河流流域。分水岭的迁移影响着地貌、区域气候、生态系统和生物多样性的演变。在本综述中,我们将评估分水岭迁移的过程和动态,并深入探讨其对气候和生物多样性的影响。排水分界线并不是一成不变的:它们可以在不稳定的地形中通过连续的渐进迁移过程移动,也可以通过不频繁的河流截流事件突然移动。分水岭往往向侵蚀速度较慢、隆起速度较快或水平构造平移的方向移动,移动速度通常在 0.001 到 10 毫米/年之间,全球平均移动速度为 0.6 毫米/年。河流俘获的证据,如上游瀑布急剧改变流向,可以制约分水岭的迁移历史。交叉分水岭陡度等地形指标可以预测排水分水岭向地形陡度较低的方向迁移。分水岭迁移会影响区域降水的空间分布、温度和物种之间的地形连接,从而影响生物多样性。例如,淡水鱼可通过河流捕获迁移到新的流域,从而可能增加物种的丰富性。未来的研究应将先进的地貌演化模型与实地和遥感观测相结合,以更好地研究分界线迁移动态。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Drainage divide migration and implications for climate and biodiversity
Drainage divides separate Earth’s surface into individual river basins. Divide migration impacts the evolution of landforms, regional climate, ecosystems and biodiversity. In this Review, we assess the processes and dynamics of divide migration and offer insights into the impact on climate and biodiversity. Drainage divides are not static: they can move through the processes of gradual migration that is continuous in unsteady landscapes, or sudden through infrequent river capture events. Divides tend to move in the direction of slower erosion, faster uplift or with horizontal tectonic advection, with rates typically ranging between 0.001 and 10 mm year−1, and a global average of 0.6 mm year−1. Evidence of river capture, such as a sharp change in flow direction with an upstream waterfall, can constrain divide migration history. Topographic metrics, such as cross-divide steepness, can predict the migration of drainage divides towards directions with a lower topographic steepness. Divide migration influences the spatial distribution of regional precipitation, temperature and topographic connectivity between species, thereby affecting biodiversity. For example, freshwater fish can migrate into a new drainage basin through river capture, potentially increasing the species richness. Future research should couple advanced landscape evolution models and observations from field and remote sensing to better investigate divide migration dynamics. Drainage divides — the topographic boundary separating surface water flow — are dynamic features of the Earth’s surface that shape hydrological processes, sediment transport, carbon cycles and geographic connectivity of ecosystems. This Review explores the dynamics of divide migration and its implications.
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