insight
Hanna Schulz

My research: Dunes in the streambed

IGB doctoral student Hanna Schulz tells about her research visit – and about streambed sediment in motion: Sediment structures, so-called ripples or dunes, develop as a response to increased surface water flow velocity in sandy streambeds. These bedforms may be stationary or moving depending on the velocity of the surface water that flows above, into, and through these structures. Until today, research focused mainly on stationary ripples and dunes despite the fact that moving streambeds are commonly encountered in nature and can strongly influence hydrological and biogeochemical processes in sediments.

Bedforms, e.g. ripples and dunes, are formed and set into motion by stream water flow. The picture shows the streambed investigated at the Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research, Israel. The blue colour close to the sediment results from dyed blue pore water that reached the surface water by groundwater exfiltration. The surface water was stagnant during this shot. | Photo: Hanna Schulz

As part of my dissertation, I spent nine months of my doctoral research at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel. The lab of hydrologist Shai Arnon at the Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research is located within a breath-taking environment in the middle of the Negev Desert surrounded by national reserves.

For my research I was able to use one of the unique flumes of the working group. The flume system replicates a stream and allows the simulation of discharge dynamics, moving streambeds, and groundwater in- and outflow. The motivation for the study was the increasing regulation of river systems by hydropower plants and waste water treatment plants. These regulations may cause discharge fluctuations which themselves may impact the microbial respiration within the streambed. The microbial respiration in the streambed was investigated using planar optodes – non-invasive sensor foils. These optodes provided high-resolution images of oxygen and carbon dioxide distribution. The main objective of the study was to quantify how typical discharge regimes affect microbial respiration in stream sediments. Preliminary results show large differences in oxygen and carbon dioxide distributions between moving and stationary sediment conditions. In the stationary streambed, CO2 is accumulated in the bed to a much greater extent as compared to the case with a moving streambed. Faster exchange under moving streambed conditions consequently results in higher CO2 emission to the atmosphere as compared to stationary streambeds.

Despite the increasing restrictions due to Covid-19 it was possible for me to complete my experiments. This research stay turned out to be irreplaceable on both the professional and personal levels and will always be treasured. And it is not over yet: I collected an extensive amount of data whose analysis and publication will keep me busy over the coming months.

Contact person

Hanna Schulz

Doctoral Candidate
Research group
Ground Water-Surface Water Interactions