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Dispersion of discharged ship ballast water in Vancouver Harbour, Juan De Fuca Strait, and offshore of the Washington Coast

The dispersion of harmful nonindigenous biological organisms that may be present in discharged ship ballast water is an issue of international interest. The present paper examines this issue as it applies to Vancouver Harbour and Juan de Fuca Strait, British Columbia, and the adjacent U.S. waters. The objective is to determine whether potential mechanisms exist to transport viable organisms that might be present in discharged ballast water to favourable reproductive habitats within British Columbian coastal waters. The study applied three-dimensional harmonic finite element models to generate representative tidal, atmospheric, and density-driven flow fields. Particle-tracking techniques were used to simulate representative trajectories of passive and active ballast water organisms discharged at existing deballasting sites. It was determined that the safest deballasting sites are off the west coast. Under normal conditions, organisms move southward (summer) or northward (winter) in the Shelf Break Current and only under strong eastward or northward winds are they transported to the Washington or Vancouver Island shorelines.

Simple

Date (Publication)
2003-04-24
Date (Révision)
2003-02-02
Date (Création)
2002-09-17
Responsable
Nom de l'organisation Nom de la personne Adresse e-mail Rôle

DFO

Colin Levings

Point de recherche

Triton Consultants Ltd.

M.R. Larson

Point de recherche

Institute of Ocean Sciences, Fisheries and Oceans Canada

M.G.G. Foreman

Point de recherche

Triton Consultants Ltd

M.R.Tarbotton

Point de recherche
Forme de la présentation
Document numérique
Autres informations de référence

J. Environ. Eng. Sci. 2: 163–176 (2003)

doi: 10.1139/S03-014


Written discussion of this article is welcomed and will be received

by the Editor until 30 September 2003.

But

The goal of the present investigationwas to determine whether potential mechanisms exist for the transport of viable biological organisms present in discharged ballast water to favourable reproductive habitats within the sheltered B.C. coastal waters in the Straits of Georgia and Juan de Fuca. It is far beyond the intent of this paper to provide statistical estimates of the fate of all organisms that might be discharged from ballast water into West Coast coastal waters as this would require an exhaustive study with different modelling techniques than have been employed here. Rather, the objective of this paper is to demonstrate whether the presently recommended alternate deballasting locations could result in undesirable particle transport during typical conditions. Due to the wide range of parameters affecting the transport of organisms (e.g., discharge location, tidal and seasonal conditions, organism properties, etc.), it is not feasible to investigate this issue with field techniques, and numerical simulation is the only practical approach to the problem. The remainder of the paper describes the simulation assumptions and procedures as well as the conclusions resulting from this work.

Etat
Finalisé
Fréquence de mise à jour
Non planifiée

Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus

  • Discharge

  • Microorganisms

DFO Areas

  • North Pacific Ocean > South Inner Coast(Johnstone Strait, Strait of Georgia, Juan de Fuca, inlets and passages)

DFO Areas

  • North Pacific Ocean > South Inner Coast(Johnstone Strait, Strait of Georgia, Juan de Fuca, inlets and passages)

Langue de la ressource

English

Encodage des caractères
Utf8
Catégorie ISO
  • Océans
Description de l'environnement de travail

8 KB

Description

Vancouver Harbour, Juan De Fuca Strait, and offshore of the Washington Coast

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Début
1995
Fin
2004
Format (encodage)
Nom Version

electronic

none

Contact
Nom de l'organisation Nom de la personne Adresse e-mail Rôle

Pacific Salmon Foundation

Isobel Pearsall

pearsalli@shaw.ca

Distributeur
Ressource en ligne
Protocole Adresse Internet Nom

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link

https://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/data-donnees/index-eng.html

DFO Science website

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download

https://soggy2.zoology.ubc.ca/geonetwork/srv/api/records/7bb96de3-8b25-495e-bcef-c87687470df6/attachments/7bb96de3-8b25-495e-bcef-c87687470df6.pdf 7bb96de3-8b25-495e-bcef-c87687470df6.pdf

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download

https://soggy2.zoology.ubc.ca/geonetwork/srv/api/records/7bb96de3-8b25-495e-bcef-c87687470df6/attachments/7bb96de3-8b25-495e-bcef-c87687470df6.xlsx 7bb96de3-8b25-495e-bcef-c87687470df6.xlsx
Niveau
Jeu de données
Généralités sur la provenance

Levings produced paper copy. Fraser scanned with Fujitsu Scansnap s1500 (ABBY Finereader OCR software). Data was extracted through Adobe Reader conversion and manual entry into MS Excel.

Métadonnées

Identifiant de la fiche
7bb96de3-8b25-495e-bcef-c87687470df6 XML
Langue

eng

Jeu de caractères
Utf8
Type de ressource
Jeu de données
Date des métadonnées
2023-12-19T00:20:46.967Z
Nom du standard de métadonnées

North American Profile of ISO19115:2003 - Geographic information - Metadata

Version du standard de métadonnées

NAP - CAN/CGSB-171.100-2009

Contact
Nom de l'organisation Nom de la personne Adresse e-mail Rôle

Pacific Salmon Foundation

Sarah Fraser

fraser.sarahk@gmail.com

Auteur
Autre langue
LanguageCode CharacterEncoding
Français Utf8
Anglais Utf8
 
 

Aperçus

thumbnail

Étendue spatiale

N
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W


Mots clés

Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus
Discharge Microorganisms

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