Flow regulation and water abstractions may change the complex relationship between river hydraulics, morphology, and riparian vegetation. As a result, rivers are likely to decrease their dynamics, increase the amount of vegetation, and modify their habitat structure. Flood events provide a natural mechanism for removal of invasive vegetation and recreation of natural floodplain habitats. This work aims at evaluating and quantifying how gravel-bed braided rivers naturally control vegetation encroachment through morphological processes and the impact of both naturally occurring and induced avulsions. Flume experiments were conducted in a 24-m-long x 1.6-m-wide channel filled with well-sorted sand and constant longitudinal gradient at 0.01 m/m. Once a braided network developed, the flume was seeded with Eruca sativa at a density of 1.5 seeds/cm(2) and grown until an approximate height of 1.1 cm. Experiments evaluated low-, medium-, and large-flood events and documented morphological changes and impacts to vegetation at four intervals during the experiments. High-resolution images captured approximately 3 m above the flume were used to produce accurate Structure-from-Motion-derived topography and orthoimagery (average errors 2 mm). Vegetation dynamics were observed to be highly variable and depend on local morphological changes and bank erosion. Discharge is the first-order control on vegetation removal, but our results show that occurrence of avulsions significantly increases vegetation removal. The experiments highlight that a relatively small amount of sediment relocation can be an effective tool to induce avulsions and reduce vegetation encroachment on regulated rivers.

Management of vegetation encroachment by natural and induced channel avulsions: A physical model / Javernick, L.; Bertoldi, W.. - In: RIVER RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS. - ISSN 1535-1459. - STAMPA. - 35:8(2019), pp. 1257-1268. [10.1002/rra.3494]

Management of vegetation encroachment by natural and induced channel avulsions: A physical model

Javernick L.;Bertoldi W.
2019-01-01

Abstract

Flow regulation and water abstractions may change the complex relationship between river hydraulics, morphology, and riparian vegetation. As a result, rivers are likely to decrease their dynamics, increase the amount of vegetation, and modify their habitat structure. Flood events provide a natural mechanism for removal of invasive vegetation and recreation of natural floodplain habitats. This work aims at evaluating and quantifying how gravel-bed braided rivers naturally control vegetation encroachment through morphological processes and the impact of both naturally occurring and induced avulsions. Flume experiments were conducted in a 24-m-long x 1.6-m-wide channel filled with well-sorted sand and constant longitudinal gradient at 0.01 m/m. Once a braided network developed, the flume was seeded with Eruca sativa at a density of 1.5 seeds/cm(2) and grown until an approximate height of 1.1 cm. Experiments evaluated low-, medium-, and large-flood events and documented morphological changes and impacts to vegetation at four intervals during the experiments. High-resolution images captured approximately 3 m above the flume were used to produce accurate Structure-from-Motion-derived topography and orthoimagery (average errors 2 mm). Vegetation dynamics were observed to be highly variable and depend on local morphological changes and bank erosion. Discharge is the first-order control on vegetation removal, but our results show that occurrence of avulsions significantly increases vegetation removal. The experiments highlight that a relatively small amount of sediment relocation can be an effective tool to induce avulsions and reduce vegetation encroachment on regulated rivers.
2019
8
Javernick, L.; Bertoldi, W.
Management of vegetation encroachment by natural and induced channel avulsions: A physical model / Javernick, L.; Bertoldi, W.. - In: RIVER RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS. - ISSN 1535-1459. - STAMPA. - 35:8(2019), pp. 1257-1268. [10.1002/rra.3494]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/245898
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