“…With the accelerated expansion of human activities from temperate and humid environments into arid environments, many dryland rivers have already been strongly influenced by, or are under significant threat from, various human interventions such as land reclamation and flow regulation, which often have more significant potential to disturb hydrological (e.g., Jacobson et al, 1995;Schick, 1995;Tooth, 2000a;Mansur and Nurkamil, 2010;McDonald et al, 2013) and fluvial processes (e.g., Graf, 1978Graf, , 1979Ortega et al, 2014). Related research has mainly been carried out in recent decades, for example, the changing channel patterns of the Gila River in Arizona, in the southwestern United States of America, resulting from flow regulation and the introduction of Tamarix, an exotic plant with more suitability than local vegetation (Graf, 1978(Graf, , 1979(Graf, , 1988; the flow regime and hydrologic change of the Murray and the Barwon-Darling Rivers (Maheshwari et al, 1995;Thoms and Sheldon, 2000); the adjusted channel morphology of ephemeral streams due to urbanization in southwest America (Chin and Gregory, 2001;Coleman et al, 2005); and changes in the dynamics and morphology of ephemeral rivers in Mediterranean regions Bledsoe, 2011, 2013).…”