Publication Abstract

Title
Hydrographic circulation and the dispersal of herring larvae in the Blackwater estuary
Publication Abstract

Hydrographic circulation and the dispersal of herring larvae in the Blackwater estuary

C.J. Fox and J.A. Aldridge

Each spring, a localised stock of herring (Clupea harengus Linnaeus, 1758, Teleostei, Clupeidae) spawn in the Blackwater Estuary (Essex, England). The eggs are laid on a gravel bank (Eagle Bank) at the mouth of the estuary. Incubation takes three to four weeks and, after hatching, the larvae can be caught in the area for several months. In this paper, we present results from a finite-element circulation model used to simulate tidal and wind driven flow fields for the region. A particle tracking model was then used to simulate the dispersal of young herring larvae, up to first feeding, hatching from the Eagle Bank. The simulations predicted that, over a period of 12 days, around,63% of particles would be retained in the area of the Eagle Bank at high water whilst 22% of particles would be further south towards the Buxey Sands. Over the same time, about 7% of the particles released would be found in the River Blackwater itself. Imposing a steady state wind of 10 m s-1 from the south-west (the dominant wind direction during spring in this area) or north-east had the effect of moving the majority of particles into the river or offshore to the south respectively.

Reference:

C.J. Fox and J.A. Aldridge, 2000. Hydrographic circulation and the dispersal of herring larvae in the Blackwater estuary. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK , 80(5): 921-928.

Publication Internet Address of the Data
Publication Authors
C.J. Fox* and J.A. Aldridge*
Publication Date
January 2000
Publication Reference
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK , 80(5): 921-928
Publication DOI: https://doi.org/