A numerical investigation of the impact of turbulence on the feeding rates of Oithona davisae
Authored by Maurizio Ribera d'Alcala, Patrizio Mariani, Vincenzo Botte
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2006.04.020
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Abstract
Individual based numerical simulations of the copepod, Oithona davisae, feeding on motile prey, Oxyrrhis marina, under variable turbulent
conditions are performed. These simulations correspond to laboratory
observations conducted by Saiz et al. {[}Saiz, E., Calbet, A., and
Broglio, E., 2003. Effects of small-scale turbulence on copepods: the
case of Oithona Davisae. Limnol. Oceanogr., 48:1304-1311.].
The flow field in the simulation is reconstructed by a kinematic
simulation whose characteristic scales are derived from the grid mesh
and the dissipation rates of the laboratory experiments. The kinematic
simulation provides a simplified model, which while not fully realistic, captures the basic relevant feature of turbulence. A hop and sink
swimming behaviour is prescribed for O. davisae, while O. marina moves
along helical paths with random changes of directions.
Three possible effects are tested: the existence of a time threshold in
the duration of the contacts between predator and prey, a progressive
reduction of the perceptive distance with increasing turbulence level
and an abrupt reduction in feeding of O. davisae when the flow speed, in
relation to the copepod position, is higher than a prescribed threshold.
This last approach introduces an intermittency in the feeding which
depends on the variations of velocity both in space and time within the
numerical box.
The introduction of the time threshold causes a dome-shaped relationship
between the simulated enhancement factor and the dissipation rate, while
with the other two effects, a monotonic decrease in the enhancement
factor is observed, with values reasonably close to the ones observed in
the laboratory experiment. In all the cases, the use of realistic values
of biological parameters (e.g. swimming behaviour) reproduces response
curves in the range of the observations. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Simulation
plankton
Environments
Small-scale turbulence
Contact rates
Flow-field
Copepod
Homogeneous isotropic turbulence
Encounter
rates
Calm