Spatio-temporal overlap of oil spills and early life stages of fish
Authored by Trond Kristiansen, Frode B Vikebo, Petter Ronningen, Vidar S Lien, Sonnich Meier, Mark Reed, Bjorn Adlandsvik
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fst131
Sponsors:
Norwegian Research Council (NRF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Coupling an oil drift and fates model (Oscar) in an offline environment
with an individual-based model (IBM) for Northeast Arctic cod (Gadus
morhua) eggs and larvae enables us to quantify the exposure of eggs and
larvae to oil from various oil spill scenarios. Oscar describes the
spatio-temporal dispersal and fate of hydrocarbons, whereas the egg and
larval IBM integrates the exposure of each individual. We can thus
evaluate the effects of the time and location of an oil spill on the
degree of exposure for individuals from different spawning grounds
(SGs). In addition, we quantify how this effect is modified by the
dynamic vertical positioning of eggs and the vertical behaviour of
larvae. The principal findings of the study indicate that the mean egg
and larval exposures for individuals from different SGs are highly
dependent on the time and location of the spill and the vertical
distribution of the offspring. Approximately 9.9, 4.7, 3.5, and 0.4\% of
the offspring would experience total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
(TPAH) concentrations above 1 A mu g l(-1) (parts per billion, ppb) for
oil spill scenarios situated at Haltenbanken, Lofoten, and VesterAyenlen
near the coast and near the shelf edge, respectively, based on the
maximum TPAH concentrations in the water column along the individual
offspring trajectories.
Tags
models
Mortality
Gadus-morhua
Toxicity
Northeast arctic cod
Capelin mallotus-villosus
Weathered crude-oil
Calanus-finmarchicus
Embryos
Larvae