Impact of floodplain and Stage 0 stream restoration on flood attenuation and floodplain exchange during small frequent storms |
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Authors: | Carly E. Federman Durelle T. Scott Erich T. Hester |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA Contribution: Investigation, Validation, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing;2. Department of Biological Systems Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA;3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA |
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Abstract: | River flooding impacts human life and infrastructure, yet provides habitat and ecosystem services. Traditional flood control (e.g., levees, dams) reduces habitat and ecosystem services, and exacerbates flooding elsewhere. Floodplain restoration (i.e., bankfull floodplain reconnection and Stage 0) can also provide flood management, but has not been sufficiently evaluated for small frequent storms. We used 1D unsteady Hydrologic Engineering Center's River Analysis System to simulate small storms in a 5 km-long, second-order generic stream from the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and varied % channel restored (starting at the upstream end), restoration location, restoration bank height (distinguishes bankfull from Stage 0 restoration), and floodplain width/Manning's n. Stream restoration decreased (attenuated) peak flow up to 37% and increased floodplain exchange by up to 46%. Floodplain width and % channel restored had the largest impact on flood attenuation. The incremental effects of new restoration projects on flood attenuation were greatest when little prior restoration had occurred. By contrast, incremental effects on floodplain exchange were greatest in the presence of substantial prior restoration, setting up a tradeoff. A similar tradeoff was revealed between attenuation and exchange for project location, but not bank height or floodplain width. In particular, attenuation and exchange were always greater for Stage 0 than for bankfull floodplain restoration. Stage 0 thus may counteract human impacts such as urbanization. |
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Keywords: | bankfull riparian sub-annual dynamic flood simulation natural channel design |
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