Affiliation:
1. School of Geography Queen Mary University of London London UK
2. Department of Geography and Earth Sciences Aberystwyth University Aberystwyth UK
Abstract
AbstractApplication of an integrated spatial approach combining several sources of remote sensing data to include both channel and floodplain morphological and sedimentological impacts has identified the geomorphological effects of three extreme flood events during a single flood season (2019–2020) along a 16‐km reach of the River Teme, UK. This combined approach allowed the assessment of in‐channel pattern development, incision and aggradation; lateral bank migration; and overbank sedimentation and scour by out‐of‐channel flows. Rates of change during the event period were compared with those in the previous 10 years. The approach also allowed the role of vegetation and cultivation, both bankside and out on floodplains, to be assessed with variations in the extent of riparian wood and channel slope driving contrasts in the extent of the response. The spatial impacts from such extreme events are highly localised, varied in kind, and can be considered for both rivers and floodplains together. Erosional effects were distinctively distributed and not simply contributions to ongoing meander development; channel aggradation was localised, and overbank sedimentation explicably patchy. In reaches without woody vegetation, differences in channel and floodplain slope, local floodplain relief as created by prior events, and the impact of man‐made structures were factors that drove variations in flood response. This study strongly underlines the role of continuous riparian vegetation in maintaining bank stability and constraining lateral channel migration, but also to the potential influence of floodplain vegetation and planting for ‘natural engineering’ in the context of floodplains as well as channels in comparable environments. Maintenance of riparian vegetation in the context of landowner and Natural England conflict and management of future flood risk is important, but also highlighted is the need to consider the role of hedgerows and wider planting for constraining soil and riverbank erosion during flood events.
Subject
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Earth-Surface Processes,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
4 articles.
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