4.7 Article

Mesoscale-driven dispersion of early life stages of European eel

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FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
卷 10, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2023.1163125

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European eel; dispersion; mesoscale; Sargasso Sea; larvae; survey; model

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The larvae of European eels travel a distance of approximately 5,000 km from the Sargasso Sea to the European coasts. This study focuses on the larval drift and analyzes the effects of mesoscale processes using survey data and modeling. The distribution of larvae in the Subtropical Convergence Zone was examined, and patterns in water mass distribution and particle dispersion dynamics were analyzed. The results suggest that the larval distribution is influenced by frontal zones and current shear, challenging common interpretations of eel larval drift.
The larvae of the European eel travel an extensive distance of approximately 5,000 km from the spawning area in the Sargasso Sea to the European coasts. We here study the larval drift with focus on the effects of mesoscale processes, analyzing data from a targeted survey and modeling possible drift trajectories. The survey covered the initial distribution of larvae in the Subtropical Convergence Zone (STCZ), which is characterized by complex patterns of oceanic fronts and mesoscale eddies. During March-April 2014, sampling was carried out along north-south transects. Hydrography was described using vertical CTD casts and UCTD profiles, and larval distributions assessed from hauls of a large ring net. Patterns in water mass distribution and particle dispersion dynamics were analyzed by reconstruction and diagnosis of mesoscale dynamics, combining satellite observations and Argo profiles. Lagrangian drift trajectories of eel larvae were subsequently simulated starting from a data-driven high-resolution 3D reconstruction of the modeled flow. We found the area of larval distribution delimited by frontal zones, defined by the combined effects of marked longitudinal salinity gradients and large-scale zonal temperature variations. Modeled patterns of eel larvae dispersion were predominantly influenced by the current shear and eddy strain, and while the direction was mainly westward, a significant dispersal was also observed in northeastward directions. Such almost isotropic transport of European eels is supported by historical data on larval size distribution, and results challenge common interpretations of eel larval drift, which propose an initial westward advection of the entire population to the Gulf Stream along the offshore edge of the Antilles current.

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