Authors
Fazlul Karim, Anne Kinsey‐Henderson, Jim Wallace, Angela H Arthington, Richard G Pearson
Publication date
2012/8/30
Journal
Hydrological Processes
Volume
26
Issue
18
Pages
2710-2723
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
Description
Hydrological connectivity between floodplain wetlands and rivers is one of the principal driving mechanisms for the diversity, productivity and interactions of the major biota in river–floodplain systems. This article describes a method of quantifying flood‐induced overbank connectivity using a hydrodynamic model (MIKE 21) to calculate the timing, the duration and the spatial extent of the connections between several floodplain wetlands and rivers in the Tully–Murray catchment, north Queensland, Australia. Areal photogrammetry and field surveyed stream cross data were used to reproduce floodplain topography and rivers in the model. Laser altimetry (LiDAR)–derived fine resolution elevation data, for the central floodplain, were added to the topography model to improve the resolution of key features including wetlands, flow pathways and natural and artificial flow barriers. The hydrodynamic model was calibrated …
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