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Bedform segregation and locking increase storage of natural and synthetic particles in rivers

Nature Communications 2021 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Edwin Saavedra Cifuentes, Shai Arnon, Jonathan Dallmann, Jonathan Dallmann, Yoni Teitelbaum, Yoni Teitelbaum, C. B. Phillips, Shai Arnon, Yoni Teitelbaum, Yoni Teitelbaum, Yoni Teitelbaum, C. B. Phillips, Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Yoni Teitelbaum, Yoni Teitelbaum, Yoni Teitelbaum, Edwin Saavedra Cifuentes, Aaron I. Packman Edwin Saavedra Cifuentes, Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Jonathan Dallmann, Jonathan Dallmann, Edwin Saavedra Cifuentes, Yoni Teitelbaum, N. L. Sund, Shai Arnon, Aaron I. Packman C. B. Phillips, C. B. Phillips, N. L. Sund, R. Schumer, Aaron I. Packman R. Schumer, Aaron I. Packman Aaron I. Packman Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Shai Arnon, Aaron I. Packman Aaron I. Packman Aaron I. Packman

Summary

Researchers discovered that the exchange of water between rivers and their riverbeds (called hyporheic exchange) plays a major role in trapping fine particles — including synthetic particles — within riverbed sediments, sometimes locking them in place permanently. This finding helps explain how microplastics and other fine pollutants become stored in river sediments rather than being flushed downstream.

While the ecological significance of hyporheic exchange and fine particle transport in rivers is well established, these processes are generally considered irrelevant to riverbed morphodynamics. We show that coupling between hyporheic exchange, suspended sediment deposition, and sand bedform motion strongly modulates morphodynamics and sorts bed sediments. Hyporheic exchange focuses fine-particle deposition within and below mobile bedforms, which suppresses bed mobility. However, deposited fines are also remobilized by bedform motion, providing a mechanism for segregating coarse and fine particles in the bed. Surprisingly, two distinct end states emerge from the competing interplay of bed stabilization and remobilization: a locked state in which fine particle deposition completely stabilizes the bed, and a dynamic equilibrium in which frequent remobilization sorts the bed and restores mobility. These findings demonstrate the significance of hyporheic exchange to riverbed morphodynamics and clarify how dynamic interactions between coarse and fine particles produce sedimentary patterns commonly found in rivers.

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