System‐Wide Effects of Local Bed Disturbance on the Morphological Evolution of a Bifurcating Channel Network

Author:

Gao Weilun1ORCID,Shao Dongdong2ORCID,Wang Zheng Bing34ORCID,Zhu Zhenchang15,Yang Zhifeng15

Affiliation:

1. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Water Quality Improvement and Ecological Restoration for Watersheds School of Ecology, Environment and Resources Guangdong University of Technology Guangzhou China

2. State Key Laboratory of Water Environment Simulation School of Environment Beijing Normal University Beijing China

3. Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences Delft University of Technology Delft The Netherlands

4. Deltares Delft The Netherlands

5. Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Guangzhou) Guangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractDeltaic channel networks are important conduits for water and material supplies to the fluvial and coastal communities. However, increasing human interventions in river deltas have altered the topology and geometry of channel networks as well as their long‐term evolution. While the morphological evolution of a single channel has received extensive studies, the system‐wide morphological responses of channel networks to local disturbances remain largely unclear. Here we investigate the morphological responses of a bifurcating channel network subject to local disturbance of channel deepening due to dredging and sand mining through idealized simulations, and further compare the results with the reference scenarios of a single channel and theoretical analysis of the phase plane. The results show that the infilling of the local deepening is associated with the erosion of the entire branch, which also causes system‐wide effects on the siltation of the other branch. The morphological responses of the bifurcating channel network consist of a relatively short stage for the infilling of the local deepening followed by a relatively long stage for recovering the equilibrium configuration of the river bifurcation. The system‐wide effects of the local disturbance arise from the altered water surface slope and water partitioning downstream of the bifurcation due to the local deepening. Also, the prolonged recovery of the equilibrium configuration is consistent with theoretical analysis, which reveals a slow evolution of the bifurcation when approaching the equilibrium. Our results can help understand the long‐term morphological responses of large‐scale complex channel networks and inform water managements under increasing human interventions.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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