Simulation of the impacts of constructed wetlands on river flow using WSIMOD

Abstract

Increased demands for land use in urban development have reduced the extent of open water bodies in recent decades, leading to more frequent extreme flows in urban rivers. Urban nature-based solutions, such as constructed wetlands, have the potential to provide significant water management benefits if implemented on a large scale, well-maintained, and used sustainably. However, their actual benefits in urban water systems have not been adequately evaluated, and the underlying mechanisms remain underexplored. These limitations hinder the effective planning of the integration methods for constructed wetlands. To assess the water management benefits of constructed wetlands at the catchment scale, this study analyses river flow data collected before and after wetland construction in Enfield, London. The Water Systems Integrated Modelling (WSIMOD) framework is used to simulate the integrated catchment water cycle, and the constructed wetlands module is conceptualised and included in the WSIMOD to evaluate their interactions within the urban catchment water cycle. Scenarios are designed to assess the impacts of varying configurations and sizes of the wetlands on the river flow. The findings indicate that constructed wetlands are observed to attenuate river flow peaks and increase low flows. Constructed wetlands reduce the frequency of river flow peaks at the catchment scale; results show that in the case of Enfield, converting 1% of the catchment area to wetlands can decrease high flows (10% exceedance probability) by 18–23% and increase low flows (90% exceedance probability) by 35–50%, reducing the flashiness of the urban water cycle. Incorporating wetlands arranged in parallel exhibits superior performance in attenuating flow peaks compared to wetlands arranged in series, as the wetlands placed in parallel can provide more space to store rapidly generated runoff. The results quantified the effects of constructed wetlands on high and low flows in the urban water system, using the WSIMOD to provide recommendations on wetland connection modes for decision-making

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