“…Some authors focused their attention on the mechanisms of instability of the emerging rigid vegetation when major flood events occur (Calvani et al., 2019; Francalanci et al., 2020; Miyamoto & Kimura, 2016; Tanaka & Yagisawa, 2009). Other authors investigated the dynamics of mobilization and transport of woody debris already present in the riverbed (Bocchiola at al., 2008; Persi et al., 2016, 2018, 2019; Ruiz‐Villanueva et al., 2016; Sibilla et al., 2020; Zischg et al., 2018), the risk and the probability of wood accumulation at bridge piers and deck (Diehl, 1997; Panici et al., 2020; Shalko et al., 2020a), the geometric parameters that contribute to worsen such an accumulation (De Cicco et al., 2015), their influences on the stability of the accumulations (De Cicco et al., 2020; Panici & de Almeida, 2018) and the engineering strategies to reduce the occurrence of such situations (Rossi & Armanini, 2019; Schalko et al., 2020b; Schmocker & Weitbrecht, 2013). The entrapment probability increases if the bridge has prominent abutments, low freeboard, and piers in the riverbed, but also in the absence of piers and in conditions of a supercritical flow if the bridge is already partially occluded, or in presence of a subcritical flow if the entrance is initially not dammed (see Gschnitzer et al., 2017).…”