Compact Models Quantify the Impact of Floodplain Storage on Sediment
Delivery Timescales and Restoration Efficiency
Abstract
Deposition on floodplains delays the downstream movement of particles
transported by rivers, increasing the time required to improve water
quality in downstream receiving waters following watershed restoration
schemes designed to reduce upstream sediment loading. We present
equations to assess whether floodplain storage is likely to influence
the timing of sediment delivery, for estimating mean travel times, and
for determining complete travel time distributions. We use a step
reduction in upstream sediment supply to represent expected effects of
best management practices, and present an analytical solution for the
time needed to deliver restoration benefits downstream. Parameters
required by these equations can be extracted from sediment budgets and
estimates of the ages of floodplain deposits. Illustrative computations
for the mid-Atlantic region predict that only 15% of the sediment load
can be transported 200 km without being stored on a floodplain. Once
deposited, particles remain in place for ~300 years,
leading to average transport velocities of only ~100 m/yr.
For distances of 20-75 km, average travel times range from
~500 to ~750 years. These results suggest
that Best Management Practices employed in the headwaters of large
watersheds will not benefit downstream estuaries within the decadal
timescales typically considered by watershed managers. Precise
predictions, however, will require accurately measuring floodplain
deposition, erosion, and sediment chronologies throughout watersheds,
data that are currently unavailable.