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Exploring drift simulations from ocean circulation experiments: Application to cod eggs and larval drift

Academic article
Year of publication
2021
Journal
Climate Research (CR)
External websites
Cristin
Arkiv
Doi
Involved from NIVA
Kristina Øie Kvile
Contributors
Arne Melsom, Kristina Øie Kvile, Knut Frode Dagestad, Gøran Brostrøm, Øystein Langangen

Summary

Drift models are commonly used to study the transport of early life stages of fish and other marine organisms. Various approaches may be applied to examine the distribution and variability of ocean trajectory pathways. In the present study, we compare results using passive Eulerian tracers and Lagrangian float trajectories that are embedded in numerical models. We supplement this analysis by applying an offline model for drift computations. The contrasts in the results from the various configurations are mainly due to differences in drift depth. Simulations were performed using horizontal resolutions of 4 and 0.8 km. The higher-resolution experiment gives somewhat more realistic results for the drift time from Lofoten to the Tromsøflaket bank at the southwestern entrance of the Barents Sea. Furthermore, differences in results between simulation years are much larger than the differences that arise from the choice of model configuration. Climate variability at high latitudes on a multi-decadal time scale is dominated by large interannual variability superimposed on an underlying moderate warming trend. We conclude that a properly configured offline drift model using hourly or 2-hourly results from a simulation with a horizontal resolution of 1 km or finer is the best approach for investigations of trajectory pathways. The flexibility of an offline drift model is also highly advantageous in biological contexts, as it easily allows for a variety of ways in which behavioural characteristics can be parameterized, including descriptions that are defined after the ocean circulation simulation has been executed.