Individual-based modelling of the development and transport of a Karenia mikimotoi bloom on the North-west European continental shelf
Authored by P A Gillibrand, B Siemering, P I Miller, K Davidson
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2015.11.011
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In 2006, a large and prolonged bloom of the dinoflagellate Karenia
mikimotoi occurred in Scottish coastal waters, causing extensive
mortalities of benthic organisms including annelids and molluscs and
some species of fish (Davidson et al., 2009). A coupled
hydrodynamic-algal transport model was developed to track the
progression of the bloom around the Scottish coast during June September
2006 and hence investigate the processes controlling the bloom dynamics.
Within this individual-based model, cells were capable of growth, mortality and phototaxis and were transported by physical processes of
advection and turbulent diffusion, using current velocities extracted.
from operational simulations of the MRCS ocean circulation, model of the
North-west European continental shelf. Vertical and horizontal turbulent
diffusion of cells are treated using a random walk approach. Comparison
of model output with remotely sensed chlorophyll concentrations and cell
counts from coastal monitoring stations indicated that it was necessary
to include multiple spatially distinct seed populations of K. mikimotoi
at separate locations on the shelf edge to capture the qualitative
pattern of bloom transport and development. We interpret this as
indicating that the source population was being transported northwards
by the Hebridean slope current from where colonies of K mikimotoi were
injected onto the continental shelf by eddies or other transient
exchange processes. The model was used to investigate the effects on
simulated K. mikimotoi transport and dispersal of: (1) the distribution
of the initial seed population; (2) algal growth and mortality; (3)
water temperature; (4) the vertical movement of particles by diurnal
migration and eddy diffusion; (5) the relative role of the shelf edge
and coastal currents; (6) the role of wind forcing. The numerical
experiments emphasized the requirement for a physiologically based
biological model and indicated that improved modelling of future blooms
will potentially benefit from better parameterisation of temperature
dependence of both growth and mortality and finer spatial and temporal.
hydrodynamic resolution. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Population-dynamics
Nitzschia-seriata bacillariophyceae
Scottish coastal current
Density
evolving model
Domoic acid production
Red tide
Gymnodinium-mikimotoi
Gyrodinium-aureolum
Biophysical model
Ecosystem-model