Reliable estimates of low flow and flood discharge at ungaged locations are required for evaluating stream flow alteration, designing culverts and stream crossings, and interpreting regional surveys of habitat and biotic condition. Very few stream gaging stations are located on small, remote streams, which typically have complex channel morphology. Adequate gaging is also lacking on larger streams that are remote, smaller than those typically gaged, or have channel morphology not conducive to installation of gages. Complex channels typically contain large scale hydraulic roughness elements that dominate flow patterns (i.e., form roughness), making it difficult to measure channel cross-section area and water velocity, or to measure channel volume even where discharge is known. In channels with large channel form roughness, it is equally difficult to estimate discharge using commonly applied equations based on slope and channel dimensions or basin area. We employed a novel approach that explicitly accounts for hydraulic resistance from large wood and riffle-pool morphology (form roughness) in calculating low flow and bankfull discharge from stream and river physical habitat data collected from 4,229 stream and river sites in the conterminous US (CONUS) sampled in 2008-9 and 2013-14 as part of the US Environmental Protection Agency's National Rivers and Streams Assessment (NRSA). Hydraulic resistance derived from form roughness clearly dominated resistance derived from bed particles (particle resistance) during summer low flows in wadeable streams across the spectrum of channel slopes and substrate sizes smaller than boulders. Under bankfull conditions, the influence of form resistance relative to particle resistance was diminished, but form resistance still dominated except in large low gradient rivers lacking complex channels, and in streams or rivers with boulder-size bed particles. We validated our hydraulic resistance estimates by comparing measured discharges with calculated discharges that used those hydraulic resistance estimates along with measured NRSA channel morphology data. Morphology-based summer discharge (low flow) estimates and direct field measurements of discharge in 2,333 wadeable CONUS streams showed reasonable agreement (median difference <2.5x) for discharges ranging from 3.6x10 to 123 m/s and drainage areas of 0.12 to 171,000 km. In a subset of 759 of NRSA's larger wadeable stream and non-wadeable river sites where nearby U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) gage data were available and adequate, our morphology-based summer discharge estimates agreed fairly well (median difference <2.0x) with USGS 20-y average August mean flows ranging from 0.003 to 16,000 m/s. Similarly, morphology-based estimates of bankfull flow ranging from 0.3 to 100,000 m/s agreed reasonably well with the 1.5-yr recurrence interval flood in these gaged sites (median deviation <2.2x). These findings demonstrate the importance of quantifying flow resistance from large-scale form roughness features in natural channels and provide a novel approach for estimating discharge from widely available survey data. This will allow examination of discharge and its ecological influence across the full range of stream and river sizes sampled by NRSA or other synoptic surveys where comprehensive measures of biota, physical habitat, and chemistry are also made. Although these morphology-based estimates exhibit some variability, they are adequate for examining regional patterns in discharge and flow alteration and their association with instream biota and anthropogenic disturbances, providing summer low and bankfull flow information where reliable estimates are lacking.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2024.109360 | DOI Listing |
FASEB J
January 2025
Key Laboratory of Biomechanics and Mechanobiology, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory of Innovation and Transformation of Advanced Medical Devices, Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, National Medical Innovation Platform for Industry-Education Integration in Advanced Medical Devices (Interdiscipline of Medicine and Engineering), School of Biological Science and Medical Engineering, Beihang University, Beijing, China.
The smooth muscle cells (SMCs) located in the vascular media layer are continuously subjected to cyclic stretching perpendicular to the vessel wall and play a crucial role in vascular wall remodeling and blood pressure regulation. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are promising tools to differentiate into SMCs. Mechanical stretch loading offers an opportunity to guide the MSC-SMC differentiation and mechanical adaption for function regeneration of blood vessels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Immunol
January 2025
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, An-Najah National University, Nablus, Palestine.
Background And Aim: NK cells and NK-cell-derived cytokines were shown to regulate neutrophil activation in acute lung injury (ALI). However, the extent to which ALI regulates lung tissue-resident NK (trNK) activity and their molecular phenotypic alterations are not well defined. We aimed to assess the impact of 1,25-hydroxy-vitamin-D3 [1,125(OH)D] on ALI clinical outcome in a mouse model and effects on lung trNK cell activations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bone Oncol
February 2025
School of Mathematics and Computer Science, Quanzhou Normal University, Quanzhou, 362001, China.
Objective: Segmenting and reconstructing 3D models of bone tumors from 2D image data is of great significance for assisting disease diagnosis and treatment. However, due to the low distinguishability of tumors and surrounding tissues in images, existing methods lack accuracy and stability. This study proposes a U-Net model based on double dimensionality reduction and channel attention gating mechanism, namely the DCU-Net model for oncological image segmentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces
January 2025
Center for Materials Science and Nanotechnology (SMN), Department of Chemistry, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1033, Blindern, Oslo N-0315, Norway.
The flexibility of the H-ZSM-5 zeolite upon adsorption of selected coke precursors was investigated using both theoretical and experimental approaches. Four structural models with varying active site locations were analyzed through density functional theory (DFT) simulations to determine their responses to different types and quantities of aromatic molecules. Complementary experimental analysis was performed, allowing for a direct comparison with the theoretical findings, using thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), nitrogen adsorption (N adsorption), solid-state NMR, and X-ray diffraction (XRD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuant Imaging Med Surg
January 2025
School of Computer Science and Technology, Changchun University of Science and Technology, Changchun, China.
Background: Accurate segmentation of rib fractures represents a pivotal procedure within surgical interventions. This meticulous process not only mitigates the likelihood of postoperative complications but also facilitates expedited patient recuperation. However, rib fractures in computed tomography (CT) images exhibit an uneven morphology and are not fixed in position, posing difficulties in segmenting fractures.
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