Abstract

Abstract. Large wood (LW) can alter the hydromorphological and hydraulic characteristics of rivers and streams and may act positively on a river's ecology by i.e. leading to increased habitat availability. On the contrary, floating as well as stable LW is a potential threat for anthropogenic goods and infrastructure during flood events. Concerning the contradiction of potential risks and positive ecological impacts, addressing the physical effects of stable large wood is highly important. Hydrodynamic models offer the possibility of investigating the hydraulic effects of anchored large wood. However, the work and time involved varies between approaches that incorporate large wood in hydrodynamic models. In this study, a two-dimensional hydraulic model is set up for a mountain creek to simulate the hydraulic effects of stable LW and to compare multiple methods of accounting for LW-induced roughness. LW is implemented by changing in-channel roughness coefficients and by adding topographic elements to the model; this is carried out in order to determine which method most accurately simulates observed hydrographs and to provide guidance for future hydrodynamic modelling of stable large wood with two-dimensional models. The study area comprises a 282 m long reach of the Ullersdorfer Teichbächel, a creek in the Ore Mountains (south-eastern Germany). Discharge time series from field experiments allow for a validation of the model outputs with field observations with and without stable LW. We iterate in-channel roughness coefficients to best fit the mean simulated and observed flood hydrographs with and without LW at the downstream reach outlet. As an alternative approach for modelling LW-induced effects, we use simplified discrete topographic elements representing individual LW elements in the channel. In general, the simulations reveal a high goodness of fit between the observed flood hydrographs and the model results without and with stable in-channel LW. The best fit of the simulation and mean observed hydrograph with in-channel LW can be obtained when increasing in-channel roughness coefficients throughout the reach instead of an increase at LW positions only. The best fit in terms of the hydrograph's general shape can be achieved by integrating discrete elements into the calculation mesh. The results illustrate that the mean observed hydrograph can be satisfactorily modelled using an adjustment of roughness coefficients. In conclusion, a time-consuming and work-intensive mesh manipulation is suitable for analysing the more detailed effects of stable LW on a small spatio-temporal scale where high precision is required. In contrast, the reach-wise adjustment of in-channel roughness coefficients seems to provide similarly accurate results on the reach scale and, thus, could be helpful for practical applications of model-based impact assessments of stable LW on flood hydrographs of small streams and rivers.

Highlights

  • Large wood (LW) is a natural structural element of rivers and streams with forested catchments (Gurnell et al, 2002; Roni et al, 2015)

  • The best fit in the unsteady hydrodynamic simulation without LW was achieved with in-channel Strickler coefficients ranging from 6 m1/3 s−1 for channel sections with larger boulders to 12 m1/3 s−1 in channel sections where fine gravel forms the stream bed

  • The hydrodynamic simulations conducted in the present study show that average flood hydrographs of previously conducted field experiments without in-channel LW can be accurately simulated in the small and high-gradient study reach using HYDRO_AS-2D

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Summary

Introduction

Large wood (LW) is a natural structural element of rivers and streams with forested catchments (Gurnell et al, 2002; Roni et al, 2015). It is part of the permanently produced amount of plant detritus in terrestrial ecosystems before it enters rivers and surrounding riparian areas (Wohl, 2015). A recent review of the hydromorphological and ecological effects of LW with a focus on river restoration can be found in Grabowski et al (2019)

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