Jorge Cortés
Professor
Cymer Corporation Endowed Chair
Stokes drift of plankton in linear internal waves: Cross-shore transport of neutrally buoyant and depth-keeping organisms
P. J. S. Franks, J. C. Garwood, M. Ouimet, J. Cortés, R. Musgrave, A. J. Lucas
Limnology and Oceanography 65 (6) (2020), 1286-1296
Abstract
The meroplanktonic larvae of many invertebrate and
vertebrate species rely on physical transport to return
them across the shelf to their adult habitats. One
potential mechanism for cross-shore larval transport is
Stokes drift in internal waves. Here we develop theory
to quantify the Stokes velocities of neutrally buoyant
and depth-keeping organisms in linear internal waves in
shallow water. We apply the analyses to theoretical and
measured internal wave fields, and compare results with
a numerical model. Near the surface and bottom
boundaries, both neutrally buoyant and depth-keeping
organisms were transported in the direction of the
wave's phase propagation. However, neutrally buoyant
organisms were transported in the opposite direction of
the wave's phase at mid depths, while depth-keeping
organisms had zero net transport there. Weakly
depth-keeping organisms had Stokes drifts between the
perfectly depth-keeping and neutrally buoyant
organisms. For reasonable wave amplitudes and phase
speeds, organisms would experience horizontal Stokes
speeds of several centimeters per second -or a few
kilometers per day in a constant wave field. With
onshore-polarized internal waves, Stokes drift in
internal waves presents a predictable mechanism for
onshore transport of meroplanktonic larvae and other
organisms near the surface, and offshore transport at
mid depths.
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Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
University of California, San Diego
9500 Gilman Dr,
La Jolla, California, 92093-0411
Ph: 1-858-822-7930
Fax: 1-858-822-3107
cortes at ucsd.edu
Skype id:
jorgilliyo