Bidirectional River-Floodplain Connectivity During Combined
Pluvial-Fluvial Events
Abstract
Hydrologic connectivity controls the lateral exchange of water, solids,
and solutes between rivers and floodplains, and is critical to ecosystem
function, water treatment, flood attenuation, and geomorphic processes.
This connectivity has been well-studied, typically through the lens of
fluvial flooding. In regions prone to heavy rainfall, the timing and
magnitude of lateral exchange may be altered by pluvial flooding on the
floodplain. We collected measurements of flow depth and velocity in the
Trinity River floodplain in coastal Texas (USA) during Tropical Storm
Imelda (2019), which produced up to 75 cm of rainfall locally. We
developed a two-dimensional hydrodynamic model at high resolution for a
section of the Trinity River floodplain inspired by the compound
flooding of Imelda. We then employed Lagrangian particle routing to
quantify how residence times and particle velocities changed as flooding
shifted from rainfall-driven to river-driven. Our results show that
heavy rainfall initiated lateral exchange before river discharge reached
flood levels. The presence of rainwater also reduced floodplain storage,
causing river water to be confined to a narrow corridor on the
floodplain, while rainwater residence times were increased from the
effect of high river flow. Finally, we analyzed the role of floodplain
channels in facilitating hydrologic connectivity by varying model
resolution in the floodplain. While the resolution of floodplain
channels was important locally, it did not affect as much the overall
floodplain behavior. This study demonstrates the complexity of
floodplain hydrodynamics under conditions of heavy rainfall, with
implications for sediment deposition and nutrient removal during floods.