7 results on '"Hajdukiewicz H"'
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2. Exploring historical changes in mountain river hydrodynamics induced by human impact.
- Author
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Hajdukiewicz H, Hajdukiewicz M, Ruiz-Villanueva V, Radecki-Pawlik A, and Zawiejska J
- Abstract
During the 20th-century many mountain rivers in Europe were subjected to intensive human impacts which substantially modified their channel morphology. How these changes affected river hydrodynamics and response to floods remains uncertain. In this work, we perform hydraulic modelling using data from archival aerial photos to explore relations between hydraulic parameters of floods and human-induced channel incision occurring on the Czarny Dunajec River (Polish Carpathians) between 1964 and 2012. Data on vertical position of the channel used for two-dimensional modelling of flood flows were extracted (as Digital Elevation Models DEMs) from archival aerial photos from 1964 and 1983 and ALS (Airborne Laser Skanning)-derived DEM from 2012. Water depth, flow velocity, bed shear stress, and sediment critical diameter were modelled for four flood scenarios (2-year, 5-year, 20-year, and 50-year floods) as well as the extent of flooded area and additionally the grain size of channel sediment was calculated. The values of water depth, flow velocity, bed shear stress and sediment critical diameter increased significantly between 1964 and 1983, especially for 20-year and 50-year floods. Only the flow velocity within the floodplain zone did not increase for the two largest flood scenarios due to the expansion of riparian forest in the second half of the twentieth century. The increase in flow rate was accompanied by a progressive reduction of the extent of flooded area, especially between 1964 and 1983, as well as by increase in mean grain size of channel sediment. Between 1983 and 2012 changes in hydraulic parameters were less pronounced, and coarser and well packed channel sediment dominated on the river bed. Our work demonstrates that reconstruction of past river hydrodynamics, rather than river state at time horizons, can give essential insights into functioning of the river channel and floodplain during the intensification of human impacts after 1950s., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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3. River widening in mountain and foothill areas during floods: Insights from a meta-analysis of 51 European Rivers.
- Author
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Ruiz-Villanueva V, Piégay H, Scorpio V, Bachmann A, Brousse G, Cavalli M, Comiti F, Crema S, Fernández E, Furdada G, Hajdukiewicz H, Hunzinger L, Lucía A, Marchi L, Moraru A, Piton G, Rickenmann D, Righini M, Surian N, Yassine R, and Wyżga B
- Abstract
River widening, defined as a lateral expansion of the channel, is a critical process that maintains fluvial ecosystems and is part of the regular functioning of rivers. However, in areas with high population density, channel widening can cause damage during floods. Therefore, for effective flood risk management it is essential to identify river reaches where abrupt channel widening may occur. Despite numerous efforts to predict channel widening, most studies have been limited to single rivers and single flood events, which may not be representative of other conditions. Moreover, a multi-catchment scale approach that covers various settings and flood magnitudes has been lacking. In this study, we fill this gap by compiling a large database comprising 1564 river reaches in several mountain regions in Europe affected by floods of varying magnitudes in the last six decades. By applying a meta-analysis, we aimed to identify the types of floods responsible for more extensive widening, the river reach types where intense widening is more likely to occur, and the hydraulic and morphological variables that explain widening and can aid in predicting widening. Our analysis revealed seven groups of reaches with significantly different responses to floods regarding width ratios (i.e., the ratio between channel width after and before a flood). Among these groups, the river reaches located in the Mediterranean region and affected by extreme floods triggered by short and intense precipitation events showed significantly larger widening than other river reaches in other regions. Additionally, the meta-analysis confirmed valley confinement as a critical morphological variable that controls channel widening but showed that it is not the only controlling factor. We proposed new statistical models to identify river reaches prone to widening, estimate potential channel width after a flood, and compute upper bound width ratios. These findings can inform flood hazard evaluations and the design of mitigation measures., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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4. Twentieth-century development of floodplain forests in Polish Carpathian valleys: The by-product of transformation of river channels?
- Author
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Hajdukiewicz H and Wyżga B
- Subjects
- Forests, Poland, Trees, Ecosystem, Rivers
- Abstract
Changes in forest extent in the corridors of four rivers of the Polish Carpathians over the last 130 years and their relation to changes in planform river geometry were investigated through the analysis of 1:25000-scale maps from the 1870s and aerial images from the mid-20th century and 2009. Average proportions of river and its geomorphic units as well as floodplain and its land cover features in the total width/area of the analysed river corridors were determined and compared between the three dates. All the analysed rivers narrowed significantly over the study period. This increased considerably the proportion of floodplains in the area of the river corridors, while lateral parts of the former, wide channels became a place of forest development. In the Koszarawa and Raba valleys, forest developed also on parts of the former floodplains following a decline in agricultural and pastoral use of lands with shallow, poor soils. The proportion of forest in the total area of the river corridors increased from 0-7.5% in the 1870s to 28.5-46.5% in 2009, and the forest expansion was mainly driven by the timing and scale of channelization works that reclaimed parts of the former channels from the rivers. A reduction in flow and sediment dynamics of Carpathian rivers over the 20th century enabled development of islands in their active zones. However, channelization works eliminated islands from most river reaches and thus islands persisted only in scarce unmanaged reaches. The expansion of floodplain forests in Carpathian valleys improves functioning of the river ecosystems but the resultant increased delivery of large wood to river channels may generate flood hazard. Optimal river management should avoid removal of riparian trees to maximize the environmental benefits but enable undisturbed transfer of driftwood through bridge cross-sections to minimize the flood hazard resulting from floodplain forest development., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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5. Island development in a mountain river subjected to passive restoration: The Raba River, Polish Carpathians.
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Mikuś P, Wyżga B, Walusiak E, Radecki-Pawlik A, Liro M, Hajdukiewicz H, and Zawiejska J
- Abstract
In the twentieth century the heavily channelized Raba River incised deeply in its mountain course. Abandonment of channelization structures in a 2.3-km-long reach within a forested corridor was followed by considerable channel widening during floods of 30- and 35-year recurrence interval, re-establishment of a multi-thread channel pattern and island development. Morphological and botanical surveys were conducted annually between 2011 and 2017 to determine the processes and patterns governing development of islands and their floristic complexity. Hydraulic conditions promoting establishment and persistence of islands were determined with one-dimensional hydraulic modelling of flood flows for 8 unmanaged river cross-sections with islands and 8 cross-sections in the adjacent channelized reaches. Average age, number of islands and their average and total area in the reach markedly increased over the study period. However, the increase was not steady but moderated by island erosion by flood flows, island establishment shortly after major floods and island coalescence in the years without such floods. Hydraulic modelling indicated that river cross-sections with islands are typified by significantly lower values of mean water depth, flow velocity, unit stream power and bed shear stress at flood flows than cross-sections in the adjacent, channelized reaches. Such conditions promote deposition of living driftwood on channel bars, initiating island development, and reduce the probability of erosion of existing islands. The total number of plant species on islands varied highly and either exceeded or was similar to that recorded on riparian forest plots in particular years. This study indicates that (i) island re-establishment in the river was initiated by substantial channel widening, (ii) variation in flood magnitudes exerts a considerable influence on the trajectory of island development, and (iii) the contribution of islands to the overall species richness of plant communities in the river corridor at early stages of island re-establishment may be highly varied., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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6. Aerial photo-based analysis of the hydromorphological changes of a mountain river over the last six decades: The Czarny Dunajec, Polish Carpathians.
- Author
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Hajdukiewicz H and Wyżga B
- Abstract
Changes in hydromorphological conditions in the mountainous Czarny Dunajec River over the last six decades were investigated through the analysis of archival aerial photos and contemporary orthophotos. The aerial images from 7 dates between 1954 and 2009 were used to evaluate changes in selected hydromorphological parameters in six reaches delimited along the river course. As a result of channelization works and in-stream gravel mining, most of the analysed river course experienced dramatic hydromorphological alterations in the active river zone: change from the multi-thread to a single-thread channel, river narrowing associated with a reduced occurrence or elimination of channel bars and islands, transformation of the gravelly bed to a bedrock-alluvial or bedrock bed, stabilization of river banks with engineering structures, and disruption of longitudinal river continuity by transverse hydraulic structures. These changes largely reduced habitat heterogeneity in the river and disrupted or limited three-dimensional connectivity of the river ecosystem. However, in the reach that had generally avoided these human pressures, such negative changes did not occur and the number of low-flow channels and the proportion of islands in the active river zone increased during the study period. In all study reaches, positive changes occurred in the riparian and floodplain areas: the proportion of wooded channel banks and forest cover in the floodplain area increased over the last six decades. The degradation of hydromorphological conditions in the active river zone was reflected in a significant impoverishment of fish and benthic invertebrate communities as well as of ground beetles inhabiting low river benches. The study confirmed the usefulness of archival aerial photos in reconstructing temporal changes in river hydromorphology. The number of features that can be evaluated with this approach is smaller than in field-based assessments of contemporary rivers but larger than in studies based on historical maps or paleohydrological analysis., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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7. Ecological state of a mountain river before and after a large flood: Implications for river status assessment.
- Author
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Hajdukiewicz H, Wyżga B, Amirowicz A, Oglęcki P, Radecki-Pawlik A, Zawiejska J, and Mikuś P
- Abstract
Assessment of the ecological status of rivers is key to monitoring the achievement of the environmental goal of the EU Water Framework Directive and the success of restoration projects. In summer of 2009 and 2010, repeated assessments of physical habitat conditions and of fish and benthic invertebrate communities were performed at low-flow conditions in 10 unmanaged and 10 channelized cross-sections of the Biała River, Polish Carpathians. Between the two surveys, an 80-year flood occurred, significantly affecting habitat characteristics and river communities. In unmanaged cross-sections, active channel width increased, whereas the degree of cross-sectional variation of flow velocity decreased. In channelized cross-sections, the increase in active channel width and the cross-sectional variation of flow velocity was accompanied by a decrease in bed-material grain size. Before the flood, the unmanaged cross-sections hosted 2.3 times more benthic invertebrate taxa than the channelized ones, whereas after the flood, the number of taxa they supported was so reduced that the taxonomic richness of benthic invertebrate assemblages in both cross-section types became similar. In comparison to pre-flood conditions, the abundance of fish juveniles (YOY) in unmanaged cross-sections was reduced nearly by half; before the flood they hosted 5 times more juvenile individuals than channelized cross-sections and only twice as many after the flood. Finally, a differing assessment of flood impact on the ecological river quality was obtained with the invertebrate-based BMWP-PL index and the European Fish Index, with the former indicating a significant reduction of the quality in unmanaged cross-sections and the latter pointing to no such change. The results indicate that assessments performed before or after a major flood may yield significantly different results for the quality of abiotic and biotic elements of the river ecosystem. Final assessment should thus be based on repeated surveys to balance the effect of extreme hydrological events., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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