4.7 Review Book Chapter

Flow and Transport in Regions with Aquatic Vegetation

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF FLUID MECHANICS, VOL 44
Volume 44, Issue -, Pages 123-142

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-fluid-120710-101048

Keywords

canopy; canopy shear layer; monami; turbulence; turbulent transport

Funding

  1. Directorate For Geosciences [0751358] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  2. Division Of Earth Sciences [0738352] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This review describes mean and turbulent flow and mass transport in the presence of aquatic vegetation. Within emergent canopies, the turbulent length scales are set by the stem diameter and spacing, and the mean flow is determined by the distribution of the canopy frontal area. Near sparse submerged canopies, the bed roughness and near-bed turbulence are enhanced, but the velocity profile remains logarithmic. For dense submerged canopies, the drag discontinuity at the top of the canopy generates a shear layer, which contains canopy-scale vortices that control the exchange of mass and momentum between the canopy and the overflow. The canopy-scale vortices penetrate a finite distance into the canopy, delta(e), set by the canopy drag. This length scale segregates the canopy into two regions: The upper canopy experiences energetic turbulent transport, controlled by canopy-scale vortices, whereas the lower canopy experiences diminished transport, associated with the smaller stem-scale turbulence. The canopy-scale vortices induce a waving motion in flexible blades, called a monami.

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