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research article

Biomorphodynamics of river banks in vegetated channels with self-formed width

Zen, Simone
•
Perona, Paolo  
2022
Advances in water Resources

Laboratory and field studies investigating the mutual interaction between riparian vegetation dynamics and river morphodynamics have revealed that riparian vegetation may play an important role in the evolution of channel beds and river banks. In order to disentangle this still debated question, field and modeling techniques have helped to explore and better understand the time and spatial scales of such processes. Simple morphodynamic models for river evolution have typically used a constant discharge to describe in-channel processes and basic relationships for river bank dynamics. In order to overcome these limits we propose a longitudinally integrated dynamical model that describes the bank pull - bar push mechanisms in channels with symmetric cross section. Different hydrographs (constant, periodic and stochastic discharge) are applied to investigate channel width and vegetation biomass evolution trajectories and equilibrium values. Results show the interplay of riparian vegetation and water flow in controlling channel width evolution and the trajectories of channel adjustment to flow perturbations. These results also highlight the limit of adopting a constant discharge when describing mutual flow and vegetation processes affecting channel evolution. In addition, under stochastic forcing, the model shows the existence of a range of flood frequencies for which the cooperation between the hydrologic time scales and that characterizing vegetation colonization induces a regular pattern in channel width time variations (coherence resonance). Finally, model application to real case studies confirm the possibility to use the model to interpret long-term river evolutionary trajectories in realistic applications.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.103488
Author(s)
Zen, Simone
Perona, Paolo  
Date Issued

2022

Published in
Advances in water Resources
Volume

135

Article Number

103488

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
PL-LCH  
Available on Infoscience
January 5, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/184307
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