Deltaic systems are composed of distributary channels and interdistributary islands. While previous work has focused either on the channels or on the islands, here we study the hydrological exchange between channels and islands and point at its important role in delta morphology and ecology. We focus our analysis on Wax Lake Delta in coastal Louisiana (USA) and characterize the surface water component of hydrological connectivity through measurements of water discharge and hydraulic tracer propagation. We find that deltaic islands are zones of significant water flux as 23-54% of the incoming distributary channel flux enters the islands. A calculation of the travel times through a channel-island complex shows travel times through the islands to be at least 3 times their channel counterparts. A dye release experiment also indicates that travel times in islands are much longer that those within channels as dye remained in the island for the 3.8 day duration of the experiment. Additionally, islands are more sensitive than channels to environmental forces such as tides, which cause flow reversal and thus can increase travel times through the islands. Our work defines the ''hydrological network'' of a river delta to include not only the distributary channel network but also the interdistributary islands, quantifies the implications of channel-island hydrological connectivity to travel times through the system, and discusses the relevance of our findings to channel mouth dynamics at the delta front and the potential for denitrification in coastal systems.
Deltas are sensitive indicators of coastal processes (e.g., waves and tides) and show dynamic changes in shoreline morphology, distributary channel network, and stratigraphic architecture in response to coastal forcing. Numerical modeling has long been used to show delta evolution associated with a single dominant coastal process, but rarely to examine the sensitivity of deltas to mixed processes. Physics-based morphodynamic simulations (Delft3D) are used to investigate the influence of tidal currents on deltas. Tidal amplitude and the sand:mud ratio of subsurface sediment have been varied in the model. The results show that increasing tidal amplitude causes deeper and more stable distributary channels and more rugose planform shoreline patterns. A new metric for channel geometry quantifies tidal influence on the distributary channel network. Stable distributary channels act as an efficient mechanism for ebb-enhanced currents to (1) bypass sediment across the delta plain, and ( 2) extend channel tips seaward through mouth bar erosion. The basinward channel extension leads to sandier deposits in the tide-influenced deltas than in their river-dominated counterparts. The deltafront bathymetry also reflects sediment redistribution, changing the delta-front profile from concave to convex with compound geometries as tidal amplitude increases. These results suggest that channel overdeepening is a possible tidal signature that should be considered when interpreting ancient systems, and that sand may be bypassed much farther basinward in tide-influenced than in purely river-dominated deltas.
The exposure time is a water transport time scale defined as the cumulative amount of time a water parcel spends in the domain of interest regardless of the number of excursions from the domain. Transport time scales are often used to characterize the nutrient removal potential of aquatic systems, but exposure time distribution estimates are scarce for deltaic systems. Here we analyze the controls on exposure time distributions using a hydrodynamic model in two domains: the Wax Lake delta in Louisiana, USA, and an idealized channel‐island complex. In particular, we study the effects of river discharge, vegetation, network geometry, and tides and use a simple model for the fractional removal of nitrate. In both domains, we find that channel‐island hydrological connectivity significantly affects exposure time distributions and nitrate removal. The relative contributions of the island and channel portions of the delta to the overall exposure time distribution are controlled by island vegetation roughness and network geometry. Tides have a limited effect on the system's exposure time distribution but can introduce significant spatial variability in local exposure times. The median exposure time for the WLD model is 10 h under the conditions tested and water transport within the islands contributes to 37–50% of the network‐scale exposure time distribution and 52–73% of the modeled nitrate removal, indicating that islands may account for the majority of nitrate removal in river deltas.
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