Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments

Since the beginning of the 20th century, man has domesticated his environment and caused the modification of hydraulic conditions during floods. In parallel, civil engineering has strongly progressed in the domain of hydraulic structures but especially the construction of dams and dikes has also mas...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zanetti Caroline, Macia Julie, Liency Nelly, Vennetier Michel, Mériaux Patrice, Provansal Mireille
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2016-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160713015
id doaj-bcaa16df8c5b44cd9cb57a3713358364
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bcaa16df8c5b44cd9cb57a37133583642021-02-02T03:51:00ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422016-01-0171301510.1051/e3sconf/20160713015e3sconf_flood2016_13015Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environmentsZanetti Caroline0Macia Julie1Liency Nelly2Vennetier Michel3Mériaux Patrice4Provansal Mireille5ARBEAUSOLutions, Vegetation Expertise on dikesARBEAUSOLutions, Vegetation Expertise on dikesARBEAUSOLutions, Vegetation Expertise on dikesIRSTEA, Mediterranean Ecosystem and RisksIRSTEA, Hydraulic structures and HydrologyCEREGE, Geomorphology and TectonicSince the beginning of the 20th century, man has domesticated his environment and caused the modification of hydraulic conditions during floods. In parallel, civil engineering has strongly progressed in the domain of hydraulic structures but especially the construction of dams and dikes has also massively increased and part of the population has lost the culture of risk by thinking they were completely out of danger from flooding. Events of hydrometeorological origin over the last 25 years has reminded man that the hydraulic infrastructures in place for a few centuries now, are not unalterable. An unmanaged vegetal colonization along the edge of watercourses (protection dikes, retention dams, appointed river banks, ect…) can present three types of inconvenience as (i) overflow in the case of watercourse containment, (ii) formation of woody jams which generate a risk of bridge obstructions or water retention, (iii) the presence of trees and their roots which damages the containment systems protecting the territories. It is important to manage the development of this vegetation in order to conserve the positive effects on the area while also limiting the negative impacts. The current boom in vegetation engineering techniques shows that man is relearning how to live as a ‘team” with nature.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160713015
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zanetti Caroline
Macia Julie
Liency Nelly
Vennetier Michel
Mériaux Patrice
Provansal Mireille
spellingShingle Zanetti Caroline
Macia Julie
Liency Nelly
Vennetier Michel
Mériaux Patrice
Provansal Mireille
Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Zanetti Caroline
Macia Julie
Liency Nelly
Vennetier Michel
Mériaux Patrice
Provansal Mireille
author_sort Zanetti Caroline
title Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments
title_short Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments
title_full Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments
title_fullStr Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments
title_full_unstemmed Roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments
title_sort roles of the riparian vegetation: the antagonism between flooding risk and the protection of environments
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Since the beginning of the 20th century, man has domesticated his environment and caused the modification of hydraulic conditions during floods. In parallel, civil engineering has strongly progressed in the domain of hydraulic structures but especially the construction of dams and dikes has also massively increased and part of the population has lost the culture of risk by thinking they were completely out of danger from flooding. Events of hydrometeorological origin over the last 25 years has reminded man that the hydraulic infrastructures in place for a few centuries now, are not unalterable. An unmanaged vegetal colonization along the edge of watercourses (protection dikes, retention dams, appointed river banks, ect…) can present three types of inconvenience as (i) overflow in the case of watercourse containment, (ii) formation of woody jams which generate a risk of bridge obstructions or water retention, (iii) the presence of trees and their roots which damages the containment systems protecting the territories. It is important to manage the development of this vegetation in order to conserve the positive effects on the area while also limiting the negative impacts. The current boom in vegetation engineering techniques shows that man is relearning how to live as a ‘team” with nature.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160713015
work_keys_str_mv AT zanetticaroline rolesoftheriparianvegetationtheantagonismbetweenfloodingriskandtheprotectionofenvironments
AT maciajulie rolesoftheriparianvegetationtheantagonismbetweenfloodingriskandtheprotectionofenvironments
AT liencynelly rolesoftheriparianvegetationtheantagonismbetweenfloodingriskandtheprotectionofenvironments
AT vennetiermichel rolesoftheriparianvegetationtheantagonismbetweenfloodingriskandtheprotectionofenvironments
AT meriauxpatrice rolesoftheriparianvegetationtheantagonismbetweenfloodingriskandtheprotectionofenvironments
AT provansalmireille rolesoftheriparianvegetationtheantagonismbetweenfloodingriskandtheprotectionofenvironments
_version_ 1724307058872811520