Modelling nature‐based, in-channel approaches to flood management at catchment scale

A new paper reveals more about the hydrological and hydraulic performance of distributed, nature-based runoff attenuation at catchment scale

Nature-based approaches to flood risk management are increasing in popularity.  In the article A modelling framework for evaluation of the hydrological impacts of nature-based approaches to flood risk management, with application to in-channel interventions across a 29-km2 scale catchment in the United Kingdom, published in the journal Hydrological Processes, we examine the effectiveness at the catchment scale of such spatially distributed upstream measures, for which evidence remains inconclusive (for example, it remains an open question whether, under certain conditions, the individual impacts of a collection of flood mitigation interventions could combine to produce a detrimental effect on runoff response).

A modelling framework is presented for evaluation of the impacts of hillslope and in-channel natural flood management interventions. It couples an existing semidistributed hydrological model with a new, spatially explicit, hydraulic channel network routing model. The model is applied to assess a potential flood mitigation scheme in an agricultural catchment in North Yorkshire, United Kingdom, comprising various configurations of a single variety of in-channel feature.

The hydrological model is used to generate subsurface and surface fluxes for a flood event in 2012. The network routing model is then applied to evaluate the response to the addition of up to 59 features. Additional channel and floodplain storage of approximately 70,000 mis seen with a reduction of around 11% in peak discharge.

Although this might be sufficient to reduce flooding in moderate events, it is inadequate to prevent flooding in the double-peaked storm of the magnitude that caused damage within the catchment in 2012. Some strategies using features specific to this catchment are suggested in order to improve the attenuation that could be achieved by applying a nature-based approach.

Citatation

Metcalfe P, Beven K, Hankin B, Lamb R. A modelling framework for evaluation of the hydrological impacts of nature-based approaches to flood risk management, with application to in-channel interventions across a 29-km2 scale catchment in the United Kingdom. Hydrological Processes. 2017https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.11140

 

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