Patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers

Regions containing gradients of vertical flow are often associated with sharp changes in hydrographic and biochemical water properties in coastal marine ecosystems. Often these are sites of dense plankton aggregations of critical ecological importance. In this study, a recirculating flume apparatus...

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Main Author: True, Aaron Conway
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/42925
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-429252013-01-07T20:38:37ZPatchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layersTrue, Aaron ConwayZooplankton behaviorMarine ecologyParticle image velocimetryBickley free jetAquatic ecologyZooplanktonShear flowFluid dynamicsRegions containing gradients of vertical flow are often associated with sharp changes in hydrographic and biochemical water properties in coastal marine ecosystems. Often these are sites of dense plankton aggregations of critical ecological importance. In this study, a recirculating flume apparatus with a laminar, planar free jet (the Bickley jet) was used to create finescale gradients of fluid velocity (shear) in both upwelling and downwelling configurations for zooplankton behavioral assays. Particle image velocimetry (PIV) was used to fully resolve the velocity fields allowing us to fine-tune experimental parameters to match fluid mechanical conditions commonly measured in the field. Zooplankton behavioral assays with two tropical calanoid copepods, Acartia negligens and Clausocalanus furcatus, an estuarine mysid, Neomysis americana, and the larvae of an estuarine mud crab, Panopeus herbstii, were conducted in control (stagnant), upwelling, and downwelling flow configurations. Statistical analyses (ANOVA) of individual zooplankton trajectories revealed the potential for individual behavioral responses to persistent finescale vertical shear layers to produce population scale aggregations, which is proposed here as a mechanism of patchiness in coastal marine ecosystems. Results from behavioral analyses reveal species-specific threshold shear strain rates that trigger individual behavioral responses. Furthermore, results show statistically significant changes in behavior (relative swimming speed, turn frequency, heading) for all species tested in response to a coherent shear structure in the form of finescale upwelling and downwelling jets. The results show that changes in individual behavior can increase Proportional Residence Time (PRT = percent time spent in the jet structure). On a population scale, the increase in PRT can lead to dense aggregations around persistent flow features, which is consistent with numerous field studies. These dense, patchy aggregations of zooplankton have profound trickle-up ecological consequences in coastal marine ecosystems.Georgia Institute of Technology2012-02-17T19:25:33Z2012-02-17T19:25:33Z2011-11-16Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/42925
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Zooplankton behavior
Marine ecology
Particle image velocimetry
Bickley free jet
Aquatic ecology
Zooplankton
Shear flow
Fluid dynamics
spellingShingle Zooplankton behavior
Marine ecology
Particle image velocimetry
Bickley free jet
Aquatic ecology
Zooplankton
Shear flow
Fluid dynamics
True, Aaron Conway
Patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers
description Regions containing gradients of vertical flow are often associated with sharp changes in hydrographic and biochemical water properties in coastal marine ecosystems. Often these are sites of dense plankton aggregations of critical ecological importance. In this study, a recirculating flume apparatus with a laminar, planar free jet (the Bickley jet) was used to create finescale gradients of fluid velocity (shear) in both upwelling and downwelling configurations for zooplankton behavioral assays. Particle image velocimetry (PIV) was used to fully resolve the velocity fields allowing us to fine-tune experimental parameters to match fluid mechanical conditions commonly measured in the field. Zooplankton behavioral assays with two tropical calanoid copepods, Acartia negligens and Clausocalanus furcatus, an estuarine mysid, Neomysis americana, and the larvae of an estuarine mud crab, Panopeus herbstii, were conducted in control (stagnant), upwelling, and downwelling flow configurations. Statistical analyses (ANOVA) of individual zooplankton trajectories revealed the potential for individual behavioral responses to persistent finescale vertical shear layers to produce population scale aggregations, which is proposed here as a mechanism of patchiness in coastal marine ecosystems. Results from behavioral analyses reveal species-specific threshold shear strain rates that trigger individual behavioral responses. Furthermore, results show statistically significant changes in behavior (relative swimming speed, turn frequency, heading) for all species tested in response to a coherent shear structure in the form of finescale upwelling and downwelling jets. The results show that changes in individual behavior can increase Proportional Residence Time (PRT = percent time spent in the jet structure). On a population scale, the increase in PRT can lead to dense aggregations around persistent flow features, which is consistent with numerous field studies. These dense, patchy aggregations of zooplankton have profound trickle-up ecological consequences in coastal marine ecosystems.
author True, Aaron Conway
author_facet True, Aaron Conway
author_sort True, Aaron Conway
title Patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers
title_short Patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers
title_full Patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers
title_fullStr Patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers
title_full_unstemmed Patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers
title_sort patchiness: zooplankton behavior in finescale vertical shear layers
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/42925
work_keys_str_mv AT trueaaronconway patchinesszooplanktonbehaviorinfinescaleverticalshearlayers
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