Spatially varying water-level regimes are a factor
controlling estuarine and tidal-fluvial wetland vegetation patterns.
As described in Part I, water levels in the Lower
Columbia River and estuary (LCRE) are influenced by tides,
river flow, hydropower operations, and coastal processes. In
Part II, regression models based on tidal theory are used to
quantify the role of these processes in determining water levels
in the mainstem river and floodplain wetlands, and to provide
21-year inundation hindcasts. Analyses are conducted at 19
LCRE mainstem channel stations and 23 tidally exposed floodplain
wetland stations. Sum exceedance values (SEVs) are used
to compare wetland hydrologic regimes at different locations on
the river floodplain. A new predictive tool is introduced and
validated, the potential SEV (pSEV), which can reduce the need
for extensive new data collection in wetland restoration planning.
Models of water levels and inundation frequency distinguish
four zones encompassing eight reaches. The system zones
are the wave- and current-dominated Entrance to river kilometer
(rkm) 5; the Estuary (rkm-5 to 87), comprised of a lower reach
with salinity, the energy minimum (where the turbidity maximum
normally occurs), and an upper estuary reach without salinity;
the Tidal River (rkm-87 to 229), with lower, middle, and
upper reaches in which river flow becomes increasingly dominant
over tides in determining water levels; and the steep and
weakly tidal Cascade (rkm-229 to 234) immediately downstream
from Bonneville Dam. The same zonation is seen in
the water levels of floodplain stations, with considerable modification
of tidal properties. The system zones and reaches defined
here reflect geological features and their boundaries are
congruent with five wetland vegetation zones
Revised: August 28, 2017 |
Published: April 26, 2016
Citation
Jay D.A., A.B. Borde, and H.L. Diefenderfer. 2016.Tidal-Fluvial and Estuarine Processes in the Lower Columbia River: II. Water Level Models, Floodplain Wetland Inundation, and System Zones.Estuaries and Coasts 39, no. 5:1299-1324.PNNL-SA-123352.doi:10.1007/s12237-016-0082-4