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Continental Scale Assessment of Variation in Floodplain Roughness with Vegetation and Flow Characteristics
  • Gabriel Barinas,
  • Stephen Paul Good,
  • Desiree Tullos
Gabriel Barinas
Oregon State University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Stephen Paul Good
Oregon State University
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Desiree Tullos
Oregon State University
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Abstract

Quantifying floodplain flows is critical to multiple river management objectives, yet how vegetation within floodplains dissipates flow energy lacks comprehensive characterization. Utilizing over 3.4 million discharge measurements, in conjunction with aboveground biomass and canopy height measurements from NASA’s Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI), this study characterizes the floodplain roughness coefficient Manning’s n and its determinates across the continental United States. Estimated values of n show that flow resistance in floodplains decreases as flow velocity increases but increases with the fraction of vegetation inundated. A new function (RMSE = 0.024, r2 = 0.74) is proposed for predicting n based on GEDI vegetation characteristics and flow velocity, with GEDI derived n values improving predictions of discharge relative to those based only on land cover. This analysis provides evidence of key hydraulic patterns of energy dissipation in floodplains, and integration of the proposed function into flood and habitat models may reduce uncertainty.