Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6411055 Journal of Hydrology 2015 32 Pages PDF
Abstract
Large lake floodplains have important roles in mitigating floods and providing vital habitats for wetland biota. This paper explores the hydrology of the extensive floodplains of Poyang Lake (China) to highlight complex, hysteretic relationships in the inundation dynamics, which are controlled by the heterogeneity of the land surface and time-varying exchanges between the Lake, its catchment and the Yangtze River. A physics-based hydrodynamic model of the system was used to evaluate the development and degree of hysteresis in the relationships between the flooded area, the water storage volume and the water level elevation. The modeling results indicate that the degree of hysteresis varies spatially with point of reference within the Lake. It is noted that a clockwise hysteresis is present for the majority of the Lake, but a counter-clockwise hysteresis is present at the upstream boundary, similar to a river-floodplain behavior. Both the floodplain and the permanently inundated region contribute to Poyang Lake's volume-stage hysteretic effects. The time-varying inflow from rivers in the catchment is the major factor affecting hysteresis, rather than Yangtze River controls on Lake discharge. As expected, an increase in land surface roughness (representing denser vegetation cover) produced greater hysteresis, most notably in the storage curve and derived mainly from the floodplain region. Hysteresis is an important characteristic of the floodplain hydrology that needs to be incorporated in simpler models of the inundation dynamics to avoid errors of up to 50% in the floodplain water storage. The current study shows for the first time the hysteretic nature, and its major causal factors, of the hydrology of a large lake-floodplain system. An improved understanding of Poyang Lake floodplain behavior is offered to guide the future development of water management models.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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