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contributor authorR. Andrew Goodwin
contributor authorJohn M. Nestler
contributor authorDaniel P. Loucks
contributor authorRaymond S. Chapman
date accessioned2017-05-08T21:07:43Z
date available2017-05-08T21:07:43Z
date copyrightDecember 2001
date issued2001
identifier other%28asce%290733-9496%282001%29127%3A6%28386%29.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/39726
description abstractMany aquatic species of management interest, such as endangered, sport, or commercially valuable fish, move extensively within a hydrosystem as they use different habitats for spawning, rearing, feeding, and refuge. Engineering tools are presently inadequate to simulate movement by such species as part of the water resources planning and management. We describe how fixed grid-cell methods can be coupled with mobile object-oriented modeling methods (called Eulerian-Lagrangian methods) to realistically simulate movement behavior of fish in the complex hydraulic and water quality fields of aquatic ecosystems. In the coupled system, the Lagrangian framework is used to simulate the movement of symbolic fish (that is, an individual fish, schools of fish, or some aggregate of the population), and the Eulerian framework is used to simulate the physicochemical regimes that influence fish movement behavior. The resulting coupled Eulerian-Lagrangian hybrid modeling method is based on a particle-tracking algorithm supplemented with stimuli-response rules, that is, the numerical fish surrogate.
publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
titleSimulating Mobile Populations in Aquatic Ecosystems
typeJournal Paper
journal volume127
journal issue6
journal titleJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management
identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9496(2001)127:6(386)
treeJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2001:;Volume ( 127 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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