Assessment of geomorphic effectiveness of controlled floods in a braided river using a reduced-complexity numerical model

Ziliani, Luca, Surian, Nicola, Botter, GIanluca and Mao, Luca (2020) Assessment of geomorphic effectiveness of controlled floods in a braided river using a reduced-complexity numerical model. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 24 . pp. 3229-3250. ISSN 1027-5606

Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-24-3229-2020

Documents
Assessment of geomorphic effectiveness of controlled floods in a braided river using a reduced-complexity numerical model
Published Open Access Manuscript
[img]
[Download]
[img]
Preview
PDF
82) Ziliani et al., 2020. Assessment of geomorphic effectiveness of controlled floods in a braided river using a reduced-complexity numerical model.pdf - Whole Document
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International.

11MB
Item Type:Article
Item Status:Live Archive

Abstract

Most Alpine rivers have undergone strong alteration of flow and sediment regimes. These alterations have notable effects on river morphology and ecology. One option to mitigate such effects is the flow regime management, specifically by the re-introduction of channel-forming discharges. The aim of this work is to assess the morphological changes induced in the Piave River (Italy) due to two different controlled flood strategies, the first characterized by a single artificial flood per year and the second by higher magnitude, but less frequent, floods. The work was carried out applying a 2D reduced-complexity morphodynamic model (CAESAR-LISFLOOD) to a 7 km-long reach, characterized by a braided pattern and highly regulated discharges. The numerical modelling allowed the assessment of morphological changes for four long-term scenarios (2009–2034). The scenarios were defined taking into account the current flow regime and the natural regime, which was estimated by a stochastic physically-based hydrologic model. Changes in channel morphology were assessed by measuring active channel width and braiding intensity. Comparing controlled flood scenarios to a baseline scenario (i.e., no controlled floods) it turned out that artificial floods had small effects on channel morphology. The highest channel widening (13.5 %) was produced by the release strategy with higher magnitude floods, while the other strategies produced lower widening (8.6 %). Negligible change was observed in terms of braiding intensity. Results pointed out that controlled floods may not represent an effective solution for morphological recovery in braided rivers strongly impacted in their flow and sediment regimes.

Keywords:no keywords
Subjects:F Physical Sciences > F820 Geomorphology
Divisions:College of Science > School of Geography
Related URLs:
ID Code:40878
Deposited On:22 Jun 2020 11:48

Repository Staff Only: item control page