From 03acab69ec43eea0971c0f4b81411df08cafed2a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Erik van Sebille Date: Thu, 3 Oct 2024 10:42:43 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Adding Byers paper --- articles.html | 32 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+) diff --git a/articles.html b/articles.html index 6e69060..55f32e2 100644 --- a/articles.html +++ b/articles.html @@ -118,6 +118,38 @@

Peer-reviewed articles using Parcels

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+ For marine species with planktonic dispersal, invasion of open ocean coastlines is impaired by the physical adversity of ocean currents moving larvae downstream and offshore. The extent species are affected by physical adversity depends on interactions of the currents with larval life history traits such as planktonic duration, depth and seasonality. Ecologists have struggled to understand how these traits expose species to adverse ocean currents and affect their ability to persist when introduced to novel habitat. We use a high-resolution global ocean model to isolate the role of ocean currents on the persistence of a larval-producing species introduced to every open coastline of the world. We find physical adversity to invasion varies globally by several orders of magnitude. Larval duration is the most influential life history trait because increased duration prolongs species' exposure to ocean currents. Furthermore, variation of physical adversity with life history elucidates how trade-offs between dispersal traits vary globally. +
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