Modeling the migration of the American eel in the Gulf of St. Lawrence
Authored by Melanie Beguer-Pon, Kyoko Ohashi, Jinyu Sheng, Martin Castonguay, Julian J Dodson
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3354/meps11706
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Telemetry experiments allow documentation of aquatic animal movements in
the ocean, and numerical models can contribute to our understanding of
the mechanisms underlying the observed movement patterns. In this study, we used mature (silver-stage) American eel Anguilla rostrata migration
out of the St. Lawrence Estuary (SLE)-Gulf of St. Lawrence (GSL) system
to illustrate how an individual-based model coupled with a 3-dimensional
ocean circulation model can help us understand fish behaviour, and
complement ongoing and future telemetry experiments. A suite of 23
numerical simulations that combined various vertical and horizontal
swimming behaviours of virtual eels ('v-eels') was conducted to evaluate
which behaviours most closely matched the observed migratory patterns of
silver eels in the GSL. Results indicated that v-eels migrating through
the SLE-GSL must employ active swimming and complex orientation
strategies in order to migrate in the time suggested by telemetry
experiments. The use of selective tidal stream transport is sufficient
for v-eels to escape entrapment in the Estuary; however, this behaviour
requires active swimming rather than simply drifting in the direction of
the appropriate currents in the Estuary in order to eventually exit the
GSL within the time frame observed in the field. Orientation towards
higher salinity and/or greater water depths in the Gulf was not
sufficient for v-eels to successfully escape the GSL, suggesting the use
of other variables such as the geomagnetic field gradient is required.
The model also allows exploration of the potential effects of climate
change on the duration of migration, through changes in hydrological
conditions.
Tags
River
Computer-simulations
Atlantic-ocean
Anguilla-anguilla
Sargasso sea
Tidal-stream transport
Male european eels
Estuarine migration
Spawning migration
Marine
animals