TY - GEN AU - Mahé,Gil AU - Meddi,Mohamed AU - Aksoy,Hafzullah TI - Modeling and Practice of Erosion and Sediment Transport under Change SN - books978-3-03921-432-7 PY - 2019/// PB - MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute KW - proglacial channels KW - watershed KW - practice KW - modeling KW - reservoirs KW - degradation KW - rill development KW - Mediterranean Maghreb Basin KW - urban drainage system KW - fluvial erosion KW - Wadi Mina KW - Algeria KW - sewer systems KW - climate change KW - phosphorus KW - complex morphodynamics KW - incipient deposition KW - riverbed KW - limiting tractive force KW - ruptures KW - runoff KW - flooding KW - soil loss KW - suspended sediment KW - sedimentation KW - sediment KW - transfer KW - erosion KW - specific degradation KW - soil erosion KW - Xihe River Basin KW - water fluxes KW - sediment fluxes KW - environmental change KW - field measurements KW - dynamical downscaling KW - mixed-size bed material KW - two-phase flow KW - agriculture KW - sloping flume experiments KW - mitigation measures KW - bed load transport KW - shear stress KW - flow discharge KW - GSD KW - shear Reynolds number KW - Anthropocene KW - human activities KW - deposition KW - sediment delivery KW - soil slurry KW - SMBA Dam KW - bedload transport KW - aggradation KW - Czech Republic KW - sediment transport KW - self-cleansing KW - erosion topography KW - CCHE1D KW - sediment retention KW - SWAT model KW - migration KW - water quality modelling KW - hillside reservoirs KW - erosion modelling N1 - Open Access N2 - Climate and anthropogenic changes impact the conditions of erosion and sediment transport in rivers. Rainfall variability and, in many places, the increase of rainfall intensity have a direct impact on rainfall erosivity. Increasing changes in demography have led to the acceleration of land cover changes in natural areas, as well as in cultivated areas, and, sometimes, in degraded areas and desertified landscapes. These anthropogenized landscapes are more sensitive to erosion. On the other hand, the increase in the number of dams in watersheds traps a great portion of sediment fluxes, which do not reach the sea in the same amount, nor at the same quality, with consequences on coastal geomorphodynamics. This book is dedicated to studies on sediment fluxes from continental areas to coastal areas, as well as observation, modeling, and impact analysis at different scales from watershed slopes to the outputs of large river basins. This book is concentrated on a number of keywords: “erosion” and “sediment transport”, “model” and “practice”, and “change”. The keywords are briefly discussed with respect to the relevant literature. The contributions in this book address observations and models based on laboratory and field data, allowing researchers to make use of such resources in practice under changing conditions UR - https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/1543 UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/53684 ER -