Floodplain
From Palaeos
A floodplain is any normally dry land area that is susceptible to being inundated by water from any natural source. This area is usually low land adjacent to a river, creek, or lake. The extent of floodplain inundation depends part on the flood magnitude, defined by the return period. Because they border bodies of water, floodplains have been popular sites to establish settlements, which has led to an increase in flood-related disasters.
In some tropical floodplain areas, annual flooding events are a natural part of the local ecology and rural economy.
Physical geography
Floodplains may be extremely broad, as in the case of the Platte River flowing across the Great Plains, where the boundary between river and floodplain is not even clear, or quite narrow, as in the case of entrenched rivers such as the Snake River in the Snake River Canyon or Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. In unmodified drainage systems where the terrain is fairly flat and rainfall intermittent, a floodplain may take the place of a river entirely. Instead of a defined streambed, there is simply a broad flat area where water flows from time to time.
Floodplains generally contain unconsolidated sediments, often extending below the bed of the stream or river. These are accumulations of sand, gravel, loam, silt, and/or clay, and are often important aquifers, the water being drawn from them being pre-filtered compared to the water in the river or stream.
Geologically ancient floodplains are often represented in the landscape by terrace deposits. These are old floodplain deposits that remain relatively high above current deposits, and can indicate former courses of rivers and streams.
Ecology
| Ecosystem |
| Benthic | Biome | Brackish | Floodplain | Freshwater | Lake | Lowland | Lowland water margins | Marginal Marine | Marine | Pelagic | Pond | River | Stream | Terrestrial | Upland |
Floodplains can support particularly rich ecosystems, both in quantity and diversity. These are termed riparian zones or systems. A floodplain can contain 100 or even 1000 times as many species as a river. Wetting of the floodplain soil releases an immediate surge of nutrients: those left over from the last flood, and those that result from the rapid decomposition of organic matter that has accumulated since then. Microscopic organisms thrive and larger species enter a rapid breeding cycle. Opportunistic feeders (particularly birds) move in to take advantage. The production of nutrients peaks and falls away quickly; however the surge of new growth endures for some time. From the Holocene, this makes floodplains particularly valuable for agriculture.
Markedly different species grow in floodplains than grow outside of floodplains. For instance, riparian trees (that grow in floodplains) tend to be very tolerant of root disturbance and tend to be very quick-growing, compared to non-riparian trees.
