Computational and Analytic Perspectives on the Drift Paradox
Authored by V B Pasour, S P Ellner
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1137/09075500x
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
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Model code not found
Abstract
The fact that many small aquatic and marine organisms manage to persist
in their native environments in the presence of constant advection into
unfavorable habitat is known as the ``drift paradox.{''} Although
advection may determine large scale biological patterns, individual
behavior such as predation or vertical/horizontal migration can dominate
at smaller scales. Using both computational and analytical methods to
model flow in an idealized channel, we explore the extent to which
biological processes can counteract physical drivers. In particular, we
investigate how different zooplankton migration behaviors affect
biological retention time under a variety of flow regimes and whether a
combination of physical/biological regimes exists that can resolve the
drift paradox, i.e., allow the zooplankton to avoid washout for time
periods much greater than the hydrologic retention time. The
computational model is a three-dimensional semi-implicit hydrodynamic
model which is coupled with an individual-based model for zooplankton
behavior, while the analytical model is a simple partial differential
equation containing both advective and behavioral components. The only
behavior exhibited by the zooplankton is diel vertical migration. Our
studies show that the interaction of zooplankton behavior and exchange
flow can significantly influence zooplankton residence time. For a
channel without vegetation, the analytical methods give biological
residence times that vary by at most a day from the computational
results.
Tags
Model
Field experiments
Persistence
Stream
Vertical migration
Patchiness
Retention
Flow refugia
Lake
Estuaries