SCIENCE sciencemag.org 21 AUGUST 2020 • VOL 369 ISSUE 6506 897
Deltas of change
Muddy deltas that form where rivers meet the sea support rich farmlands
and ecosystems. A 2020 study of 11,000 deltas found that 9% lost
land from 1985 to 2015, whereas 14% added area. Globally, deltas grew by
54 square kilometers (km^2 ) per year over that period, mostly in South
America and Asia. The leading land gainers and losers.
Shifting tides
Tidal flats, vast banks of mud that flank many coasts, are key habitats
for marine organisms and seabirds, as well as important players in
the global processing and storage of carbon and nutrients. Asian nations
boast the largest total expanses (below), but other regions have
extensive flats (above). Reductions in sediment flows imperil some
flats; one recent global study estimated flats have shrunk by at least
20,000 km^2 since 1984.
Indonesia
14,
China
12,
United States
6622
Brazil
5389
Australia
8866
Canada
6477
India
5788
Parana
Lena
Rhine-Meuse
Godava
ri
Ganga
-Brahmaputra
Vo l ga
Mekon
g
SenegalNigerMiss
issippi
NileCop
per River
Ye l l o w
10
5
0
Net delta land change (km
2 /year)
Big barriers
Asian rivers were once
among the world’s
muddiest, nourishing
huge deltas and tidal
flats. But those features
are now threatened by
a phalanx of huge dams
that prevent sediment
from reaching the sea.
A decadal decline
Although the Nile
carries one of the
world’s largest
sediment loads to
the sea, dams across
Africa now block
up to two-thirds of
the sediment that
flowed downstream
just decades ago.
River fow, in cubic meters per
second (m^3 /s), based on
average long-term discharge
Tidal fat area, in square
kilometers (km^2 ). Each dot
represents a 1° grid cell
for the period 2014–16.
~200,000 ~
0 10 20 30
Lena
Ob
Yellow
Ya n g t z e
Nile Indus
Rhine Vo l ga
Ganga
Brahmaputra
Mekong
Senegal Xijiang
Niger
Congo
Zambezi
DATA: (DELTA) NIEHUIS
ET A
L., NATURE
, 577, 514 (2020); (TIDAL FLATS) MURRAY
ET A
L., NATURE
, 565, 222, (2019)
Published by AAAS