4.7 Article

A novel cross-shore transport mechanism revealed by subsurface, robotic larval mimics: Internal wave deformation of the background velocity field

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 65, Issue 7, Pages 1456-1470

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lno.11400

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [OCE-1459393]
  2. NSERC doctoral fellowship

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Coastal physical processes are essential for the cross-shore transport of meroplanktonic larvae to their benthic adult habitats. To investigate these processes, we released a swarm of novel, trackable, subsurface vehicles, the Mini-Autonomous Underwater Explorer (M-AUEs), which we programmed to mimic larval depth-keeping behavior. The M-AUE swarm measured a sudden net onshore transport of 30-70 m over 15-20 min, which we investigated in detail. Here, we describe a novel transport mechanism of depth-keeping plankton revealed by these observations. In situ measurements and models showed that, as a weakly nonlinear internal wave propagated through the swarm, it deformed surface-intensified, along-isopycnal background velocities downward, accelerating depth-keeping organisms onshore. These higher velocities increased both the depth-keepers' residence time in the wave and total cross-shore displacement, leading to wave-induced transports twice those of fully Lagrangian organisms and four times those associated with the unperturbed background currents. Our analyses also show that integrating velocity time series from virtual larvae or mimics moving with the flow yields both larger and more accurate transport estimates than integrating velocity time series obtained at a point (Eulerian). The increased cross-shore transport of organisms capable of vertical swimming in this wave/background-current system is mathematically analogous to the increase in onshore transport associated with horizontal swimming in highly nonlinear internal waves. However, the mechanism described here requires much weaker swimming speeds (mm s(-1) vs. cm s(-1)) to achieve significant onshore transports, and meroplanktonic larvae only need to orient themselves vertically, not horizontally.

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