Lagrangian studies of sedimentation and transport. Impact on marine ecosystems

  1. Monroy Pérez , Pedro
Supervised by:
  1. Cristóbal López Sánchez Director
  2. Emilio Hernández García Director

Defence university: Universitat de les Illes Balears

Fecha de defensa: 17 September 2019

Committee:
  1. Ulrike Feudel Chair
  2. Vicente Pérez Muñuzuri Secretary
  3. Andrea Mazzino Committee member

Type: Thesis

Abstract

In the last decades there has been an increasing availability of ocean velocity data from satellite measurements, drifters and computer models that has produced important advances in the Lagrangian description of ocean transport. The use of concepts and tools from the theory of nonlinear dynamical systems has revealed very appropriate to analyse these data.These techniques can be divided into two main categories. One group is focused on geometric objects and they are based on the non-asymptotic version of Lyapunov exponents. On the other hand, there is a probabilistic approach focussing on the moving fluid regions themselves, the so-called set-oriented methods. They are based on the discretization of the Perron-Frobrenius operator. Ocean biology is an area where Lagrangian processes are undoubtedly important. Under certain approximations, marine organisms, in particular in their larvae stage, can be considered as passively driven by the oceanic currents. This and the fact that some species are rather territorial in their adult stage, allows to study the population connectivity computing their Lagrangian trajectories. The Lagrangian Flow Network (LFN) technique has demonstrated great effectiveness in studying the structure of marine populations which are commonly organized as discrete subpopulations. It is a modeling framework in which geographical sub-areas of the ocean are represented as nodes in a network interconnected by links representing the transport of propagules (eggs and larvae) by currents. While this approach has been already applied in different contexts, the global robustness and sensitivity of metrics derived from LFNs have not been quantitatively assessed yet. Here we assess the sensitivity and robustness of four connectivity metrics derived from LFN that measure retention and exchange processes, thus providing a systematic characterization of propagule dispersal. The most relevant parameters are tested over large ranges: the density of released particles, the node size (spatial-scales of discretization), the Pelagic Larval Duration and the modality of spawning. Our results have important implications to design properly connectivity experiments with particle-tracking models and to evaluate the reliability of their results. Another important marine biological process that can be studied by a Lagrangian approach is the downward flux of carbon-rich biogenic particles from the marine surface into the deep ocean. It is a key process of the biological carbon pump, responsible (together with the solubility and the physical carbon pumps) of much of the oceans’ role in the Earth carbon cycle. The problem of sinking particles is studied in a realistic oceanic flow, with major energetic structures in the mesoscale, focussing on the range of particle sizes and densities appropriate for marine biogenic particles. Our results show that the finite-size corrections are negligible compared to the most important terms, which are passive motion with the velocity of the flow, and a constant added vertical velocity due to gravity. Nevertheless, we show that two-dimensional cuts or projections of evolving three-dimensional particle clouds display horizontal clustering.