North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution

An eddy detection workflow was developed and applied to reference series of delayed time maps of sea level anomaly (Ref DT-MSLA) published by Aviso Altimetry, France in the North Atlantic region between 30-55° N and 30-80° W. The eddy detection parameters, maximum/minimum Okubo-Weiss parameter to as...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hsu, Ango Chen-Tien
Other Authors: Halpin, Patrick
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10161/2230
id ftdukeunivdsp:oai:localhost:10161/2230
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdukeunivdsp:oai:localhost:10161/2230 2023-11-12T04:21:54+01:00 North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution Hsu, Ango Chen-Tien Halpin, Patrick 2010-04-30T20:28:45Z 1938421 bytes application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10161/2230 en_US eng https://hdl.handle.net/10161/2230 Eddy detection North Atlantic Marine species distribution Catch-per-unit-effort Sea level anomaly map Master's project 2010 ftdukeunivdsp 2023-10-17T09:38:20Z An eddy detection workflow was developed and applied to reference series of delayed time maps of sea level anomaly (Ref DT-MSLA) published by Aviso Altimetry, France in the North Atlantic region between 30-55° N and 30-80° W. The eddy detection parameters, maximum/minimum Okubo-Weiss parameter to assign to the eddy core/ring, minimum eddy core area, minimum eddy core area to perimeter ratio, and minimum eddy duration, were set to -0.2/0.2 standard deviation, 5 cells (6869 km2), 0.4, and 10 images (70 days), respectively. Using these parameters, 635 anticyclonic eddies and 930 cyclonic eddies were detected between October 14, 1992 and December 31, 2005. The eddy structure of the 62103 pelagic longline fishery catch records in The Logbook System maintained by Southeast Fisheries Science Center was sampled. One-way ANOVA and t-test were conducted to compare the mean catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) of bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus), yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacores), bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus), and swordfish (Xiphius gladius) at different eddy structures. For bluefin tuna and bigeye tuna, the mean CPUE is higher in the eddy area than in the non-eddy area. For yellowfin tuna and swordfish, the mean CPUE is higher in the non-eddy area than in the eddy area. For all three species of tuna, the mean CPUE is higher in the anticyclonic eddies than in the cyclonic eddies. For swordfish, the mean CPUE is higher in the cyclonic eddies than in the anticyclonic eddies. The results suggest different eddy structures make different habitats for large marine predators and eddy activities contribute to marine species distribution. Master Thesis North Atlantic Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace
institution Open Polar
collection Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace
op_collection_id ftdukeunivdsp
language English
topic Eddy detection
North Atlantic
Marine species distribution
Catch-per-unit-effort
Sea level anomaly map
spellingShingle Eddy detection
North Atlantic
Marine species distribution
Catch-per-unit-effort
Sea level anomaly map
Hsu, Ango Chen-Tien
North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution
topic_facet Eddy detection
North Atlantic
Marine species distribution
Catch-per-unit-effort
Sea level anomaly map
description An eddy detection workflow was developed and applied to reference series of delayed time maps of sea level anomaly (Ref DT-MSLA) published by Aviso Altimetry, France in the North Atlantic region between 30-55° N and 30-80° W. The eddy detection parameters, maximum/minimum Okubo-Weiss parameter to assign to the eddy core/ring, minimum eddy core area, minimum eddy core area to perimeter ratio, and minimum eddy duration, were set to -0.2/0.2 standard deviation, 5 cells (6869 km2), 0.4, and 10 images (70 days), respectively. Using these parameters, 635 anticyclonic eddies and 930 cyclonic eddies were detected between October 14, 1992 and December 31, 2005. The eddy structure of the 62103 pelagic longline fishery catch records in The Logbook System maintained by Southeast Fisheries Science Center was sampled. One-way ANOVA and t-test were conducted to compare the mean catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) of bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus), yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacores), bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus), and swordfish (Xiphius gladius) at different eddy structures. For bluefin tuna and bigeye tuna, the mean CPUE is higher in the eddy area than in the non-eddy area. For yellowfin tuna and swordfish, the mean CPUE is higher in the non-eddy area than in the eddy area. For all three species of tuna, the mean CPUE is higher in the anticyclonic eddies than in the cyclonic eddies. For swordfish, the mean CPUE is higher in the cyclonic eddies than in the anticyclonic eddies. The results suggest different eddy structures make different habitats for large marine predators and eddy activities contribute to marine species distribution.
author2 Halpin, Patrick
format Master Thesis
author Hsu, Ango Chen-Tien
author_facet Hsu, Ango Chen-Tien
author_sort Hsu, Ango Chen-Tien
title North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution
title_short North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution
title_full North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution
title_fullStr North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution
title_full_unstemmed North Atlantic Mesoscale Eddy Detection and Marine Species Distribution
title_sort north atlantic mesoscale eddy detection and marine species distribution
publishDate 2010
url https://hdl.handle.net/10161/2230
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10161/2230
_version_ 1782337123937943552