Morphometry of Tidal Meander Cutoffs Indicates Similarity to Fluvial Morphodynamics

Author:

Gao C.12,Lazarus E. D.3ORCID,D’Alpaos A.2ORCID,Ghinassi M.2,Ielpi A.4ORCID,Parker G.56ORCID,Rinaldo A.78ORCID,Gao P.9ORCID,Wang Y. P.110ORCID,Tognin D.7ORCID,Finotello A.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Coast and Island Development School of Geographic and Oceanographic Sciences Nanjing University Nanjing China

2. Department of Geosciences University of Padova Padova Italy

3. School of Geography & Environmental Science University of Southampton Southampton UK

4. Department of Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences University of British Columbia‐Okanagan Kelowna BC Canada

5. Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering University of Illinois Urbana IL USA

6. Department of Geology University of Illinois Urbana IL USA

7. Department of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering University of Padova Padova Italy

8. Laboratory of Ecohydrology Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

9. Department of Geography and the Environment Syracuse University Syracuse NY USA

10. State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research School of Marine Sciences East China Normal University Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractSinuous channels wandering through coastal wetlands have been thought to lack lateral‐migration features like meander cutoffs and oxbows, spurring the broad interpretation that tidal and fluvial meanders differ morphodynamically. Motivated by recent work showing similarities in planform dynamics between tidal and fluvial meandering channels, we analyzed meander neck cutoffs from diverse tidal and fluvial environments worldwide, and show that tidal cutoffs are widespread. Their perceived paucity stems from pronounced channel density and hydrological connectivity in coastal wetlands, comparatively small size of most tidal channels, and typically dense vegetation cover. Although these factors do not efface tidal meander cutoffs, they collectively inhibit oxbow formation and make tidal cutoffs ephemeral features that can escape detection. We argue that similar morphodynamic processes drive cutoff formation in tidal and fluvial landscapes, with differences arising only during post‐cutoff evolution. Such process similarity has important implications for understanding coastal wetland ecomorphodynamics and predicting their long‐term evolution.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Ministero dell’Istruzione, dell’Università e della Ricerca

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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