Simulating the migration dynamics of juvenile salmonids through rivers and estuaries using a hydrodynamically driven enhanced particle tracking model

•Spatially-explicit agent-based model of fish movement in response to hydrodynamic flows.•Data and theory-driven model testbed to study fish behaviors in complex water systems.•Decision support tool for modeling complex surface water flow operations subject to environmental conservation under novel...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological modelling 2023-08, Vol.482, p.110393, Article 110393
Hauptverfasser: Sridharan, Vamsi Krishna, Jackson, Doug, Hein, Andrew M., Perry, Russell W., Pope, Adam C., Hendrix, Noble, Danner, Eric M., Lindley, Steven T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Spatially-explicit agent-based model of fish movement in response to hydrodynamic flows.•Data and theory-driven model testbed to study fish behaviors in complex water systems.•Decision support tool for modeling complex surface water flow operations subject to environmental conservation under novel conditions. Juvenile salmonids migrate hundreds of kilometers from their natal streams to mature in the ocean. Throughout this migration, they respond to environmental cues such as local water velocities and other stimuli to direct and modulate their movements, often through heavily modified riverine and estuarine habitats. Management strategies in an uncertain future of climate change and altered land use regimes depend heavily on being able to reliably predict their ocean entry timings, route use, and survival rates through rivers and estuaries. We developed a spatially-explicit agent-based model of fish movement in response to hydrodynamic flows that uses movement dynamics gleaned from multi-dimensional tracking datasets of acoustically tagged juveniles moving through an urbanized, branched tidal estuary. We demonstrate how such models can be calibrated, and we apply it to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta in Central California. The quality of the out-of-sample validation of the model to predict juvenile salmon survival and route selection indicates that the model is versatile and flexible enough to be used in novel hydroclimatological conditions.
ISSN:0304-3800
1872-7026
DOI:10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2023.110393