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The effect of river regulation on floodplain wetland inundation, Murrumbidgee River, Australia
70
Citations
33
References
2006
Year
Environmental FlowRiver Basin ManagementEngineeringWater ResourcesWatershed ManagementGeomorphologyFloodplain WetlandsGeographyRiver RegulationMurrumbidgee RiverFloodplain Wetland InundationFloodplain RiversWetland RestorationRiver RestorationHydrologySediment TransportFlood Risk ManagementFlooded Area
River regulation by headwater dams has altered the flow regime of rivers worldwide. For floodplain rivers, reduced connectivity between the main channel and floodplain wetlands has led to a decline in ecological health. Current river restoration theory advocates a return towards a more natural regime of floodplain wetland inundation. However, for many rivers, a poor understanding of the natural floodplain wetland inundation regime has hampered effective restoration management. This paper describes a technique for quantifying the effect of flow regulation on the inundation regime of floodplain wetlands on an extended reach of the Murrumbidgee River, Australia. A series of Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) images, captured before and after a set of floods, was analysed to describe the relationship between flow and inundation for a 640 km river reach. These data were combined with historical regulated and modelled natural daily flow data to show that river regulation has reduced the duration and frequency of wetland inundation by ~40%. For the majority of wetlands the capture of small and medium floods in the headwater dams reduced wetland inundation substantially. However, for low connecting wetlands in reaches upstream of the main irrigation off-takes, summer irrigation flows have increased inundation.
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