“…Moreover, floodplains have received considerable attention to date because of the valuable social and ecological functions of these systems, such as flood control, sediment and nutrient retention, recreational opportunities, agricultural production, and wildlife habitat (Pierce & King, 2008), and their land resources have increased in value. To protect these valuable resources from flood inundation, many river control works on both sides of the main channel have been built, which considerably limit the inundation space of large floods and lead to an uneven distribution of sediment deposition areas and a more complex riverbed form (Hudson & Middelkoop, 2015;Parker, 1995;Wu, Wang, Ma, & Zhang, 2005), especially along the lower Yellow River (LYR), which is a typical case of this kind. Owing to the characteristics of "insufficient runoff and excessive sediment loads lacking sufficient coordination" (Hu, Chen, Guo, & Yan, 2017;Wang, Zhou, & Li, 2006), long-term deposition has occurred in the main channel, resulting in the continuous evolution of the river morphology and the well-known phenomenon of a "secondary suspended river" in local reaches.…”