International audienceThe hyporheic zone is a thin porous sedimentary interface that connects the river to the water table. It is a place where a large part of the groundwater transits and mixes with surface water. Recent studies point to the key role of this zone, a natural biological reactor at the groundwater-river interface, in altering the nitrogen and carbon cycles, capturing and releasing contaminants and buffering river temperatures. Past studies have suggested that, locally hyporheic fluxes can overtake groundwater-river exchanges, although the physical conditions (permeability, roughness, head, ...) under which such scenario occurs remains unclear. In this study, geophysical monitoring of electromagnetic conductivity along a river...