Modelling swimming aquatic animals in hydrodynamic models
Authored by Jay Willis
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2011.10.004
Sponsors:
HR Wallingford Ltd
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Aquatic life exists between very small passive floating objects such as
spores, eggs or seeds which are at the mercy of currents through to
animals which swim powerfully enough to overcome most natural currents.
There is a corresponding scale of cognitive and sensory capability.
Coupling hydrodynamic with Lagrangian particle modelling is well
established, as is individual based modelling of animal behaviour. These
areas have developed rapidly, due to availability of faster computers.
These different disciplines have fundamentally different conceptual
frameworks, but the combination of techniques offers an unparalleled
opportunity to model swimming animals in water more accurately. More
accurate models of dispersion, migration and other spatial dynamics
would support a better informed ecosystem management and provide methods
to define protected areas that are linked in coherent networks.
Development plans for tidal power schemes and offshore wind farms mean
that predictive models of migrating fish are needed urgently.
Statistical models based on correlations become inaccurate as the
environments move to previously unobserved states. This is where models
based on rules such as individual based models have a unique advantage.
I briefly review Eulerian. Lagrangian, coupled Eulerian-Lagrangian water
models, water quality models and individual based models of animal
movements, navigation and interactive behaviour. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V.
All rights reserved.
Tags
Individual-based model
Population connectivity
Larval dispersal
Vertical-distribution
Fisheries management
Long-distance navigation
Marine protected
areas
Great australian bight
Tuna thunnus-maccoyii
Random-walk
models