Computer simulations of the effects of the Sitka eddy on the migration of sockeye salmon returning to British Columbia
Authored by MC Healey, KA Thomson, PH Leblond, L Huato, SG Hinch, CJ Walters
Date Published: 2000
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The Sitka eddy is a mesoscale eddy, 300 km in diameter, that develops
off SE Alaska in about one year in two. The eddy has surface currents
exceeding 50 km day(-1) and it has been suggested that the eddy could
deflect migrating salmon to the south, thereby reducing the proportion
of British Columbia (BC) sockeye salmon accessible to Alaskan fishers.
We modelled its effects on the migration of sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus
nerka) returning to northern BC, using an individual-based model to
simulate migration paths, migration timing and metabolic costs of salmon
with different migration behaviours. Except when their migration
behaviour included positive rheotaxis, salmon that encountered the eddy
had faster migration times and lower metabolic costs than those that did
not. The least complex migration behaviour, compass orientation with no
rheotaxis, was only slightly less efficient in metabolic terms than the
optimal migration paths determined by dynamic programming. Our
simulations show that the Sitka eddy itself does not deflect migrating
salmon to the south or south-east regardless of migration behaviour, but
that by interrupting the normal northward flow of the Alaskan Current, the eddy could influence latitude of landfall of migrating salmon.
Tags
Bioenergetics
Model
Northeast pacific-ocean
Oncorhynchus-nerka
Alaska
Fraser-river