Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/19575
Title: Biogeochemistry of the Madeira river basin
Authors: Mortatti, Jefferson
Ferreira, José Roberto Oliveira
Martinelli, Luiz Antônio
Victória, Reynaldo Luiz
Tancredi, A. C F
Keywords: Biogeochemistry
Dissolved Ion Species
Environmental Impact
Evapotranspiration
Land-use Change
Sediment Transport
Suspended Sediment
Tropical Rain Forest
Water Quality
South America, Amazonia, Madeira River Basin
Issue Date: 1989
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: GeoJournal
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 19, Número 4, Pags. 391-397
Abstract: A biogeochemical characterization of the Madeira river basin has been made to evaluate the local and global effects of possible alterations in the ecosystem caused by recent intensive occupation in Rondonia state. During the period April 1983-January 1986, sampling was made both by land and river along the tributaries and main channel of the Madeira river. The parameters analysed lead to a detailed study of the physicochemical quality of the waters of the basin and their relationship with the local geology, associated with the transport of solid material and the hydrological behavior of the ecosystem. Penman's method adapted to tropical rainforest conditions was used to evaluate the potential evapotranspiration for the basin. Estimated potential evapotranspiration was 1420 mm/y, 77% due to the energy balance. Real evapotranspiration was 94% of the estimated potential and the main residence time of the rain water in the basin was 2 months. The isotopic behavior of Hydrogen and Oxygen in the river waters of the region was typical of great rivers, the values being more positive during the dry season and more negative during the rainy season. An isotopic gradient of δ 18O 0.038 (‰)/100 km, was established from Porto Velho station to the estuary, which was considered low when compared with the value of 0.063 (‰)/100 km, obtained for the Amazon river. In general, the waters of the tributaries were poor in dissolved ion species when compared with the main channel of the Madeira river. Seasonal variation in the transport of suspended sediment kept the same pattern, greater transport being observed on rising water than during high water. A transport of 2.85 million tons per day was observed in the Madeira river near the mouth. © 1989 Kluwer Academic Publishers.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1007/BF00176908
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