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New Land Use Change Data Reveal Significantly Altered Floodplains in the Mississippi River Basin
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  • Adnan Rajib,
  • Qianjin Zheng,
  • Qiusheng Wu,
  • Ryan Morrison,
  • Antonio Annis,
  • Heather Golden,
  • Charles Lane,
  • Jay Christensen,
  • Fernando Nardi
Adnan Rajib
Texas A&M University Kingsville

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Qianjin Zheng
Texas A&M University Kingsville
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Qiusheng Wu
University of Tennessee
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Ryan Morrison
Colorado State University
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Antonio Annis
University for Foreigners Perugia
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Heather Golden
US Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research & Development
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Charles Lane
US Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research & Development
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Jay Christensen
US Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research & Development
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Fernando Nardi
University for Foreigners Perugia
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Abstract

Despite human-induced changes in floodplains over the past century, comprehensive data of long-term land use change within floodplains of large river basins are limited. Data of long-term and large-scale floodplain land use are required to effectively quantify floodplain functions and development trajectories. They also provide a holistic perspective on the future of floodplain management and restoration – and concomitantly flood-risk mitigation. Here, we present the first available dataset that provides spatially explicit estimates of land use change along the floodplains of the Mississippi River Basin (MRB) covering 60 years (1941-2000) at a 250-m resolution. We derived this MRB floodplain land use change dataset from two input data sources: (i) the high-resolution global floodplain extent dataset GFPLAIN250m, and (ii) the annual FOREcasting SCEnarios of Land-use Change (FORE-SCE) dataset for the continental United States. Our results suggest that MRB floodplains have transitioned irreversibly from natural ecosystems to predominantly agricultural land use (e.g., more than 10,000 km2 of wetlands have been lost due to agricultural expansion). Developed land use within the floodplain has also steadily increased. The dataset is publicly available through HydroShare: https://gishub.org/mrb-data as well as an interactive online map interface: https://gishub.org/mrb-floodplain. These products will support MRB resilience and sustainability goals by advancing data-driven decision making on floodplain restoration, buyout, and conservation scenarios.