Abstract

River valley bottoms have hydrological, geomorphological, and ecological importance and are buffers for protecting the river from upland nutrient loading coming from agriculture and other sources. They are relatively flat, low-lying areas of the terrain that are adjacent to the river and bound by increasing slopes at the transition to the uplands. These areas have under natural conditions, a groundwater table close to the soil surface. The objective of this paper is to present a stepwise GIS approach for the delineation of river valley bottom within drainage basins and use it to perform a national delineation. We developed a tool that applies a concept called cost distance accumulation with spatial data inputs consisting a river network and slope derived from a digital elevation model. We then used wetlands adjacent to rivers as a guide finding the river valley bottom boundary from the cost distance accumulation. We present results from our tool for the whole country of Denmark carrying out a validation within three selected areas. The results reveal that the tool visually performs well and delineates both confined and unconfined river valleys within the same drainage basin. We use the most common forms of wetlands (meadow and marsh) in Denmark’s river valleys known as Groundwater Dependent Ecosystems (GDE) to validate our river valley bottom delineated areas. Our delineation picks about half to two-thirds of these GDE. However, we expected this since farmers have reclaimed Denmark’s low-lying areas during the last 200 years before the first map of GDE was created. Our tool can be used as a management tool, since it can delineate an area that has been the focus of management actions to protect waterways from upland nutrient pollution.

Highlights

  • The rise in the availability of high-quality spatial data, especially the representation of digital terrain models (DEMs), has brought an increase in the number of GeographicInformation System (GIS) professionals striving to create methods to best describe and extract different landscape features.Delineation of valley bottom across drainage basins is becoming increasingly important due to an acceptance of the drainage basin area as the essential management unit for sustainable water and land management [1]

  • Our tool can be used as a management tool, since it can delineate an area that has been the focus of management actions to protect waterways from upland nutrient pollution

  • The overall objective of this paper is to present a stepwise GeographicInformation System (GIS) approach for the delineation of river valley bottom within drainage basins and use it to perform a national

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Summary

Introduction

Delineation of valley bottom across drainage basins is becoming increasingly important due to an acceptance of the drainage basin area as the essential management unit for sustainable water and land management [1]. The valley bottoms act as an intermediate pathway for nutrients coming from the uplands, either as surface flow, diffuse flow to wet areas on floodplains, or directly through stream-bed connected to underlying groundwater bodies and have the potential to reduce nutrients thereby protecting the surrounding aquatic environment [2,3]. The Dictionary of Earth Science defines the valley floor as “The broad, flat bottom of a valley. Known as valley bottom or valley plain.” [4].

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