Simulation of a July 1, 2019, larval drift experiment on the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT using a one-dimensional advection-dispersion model
공공데이터포털
This dataset contains outputs from the simulation of a larval drift experiment conducted on July 1, 2019, on the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT using a one-dimensional advection-dispersion model. The model used to perform simulations was developed by the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) for the Upper Missouri River and several major tributaries in HecRAS (Fischenich, Reynolds, and Halteman 2021; Fischenich et al. 2018). Fischenich, J.C., Robert McComas, Donald Meier, Jeffery Tripe, Daniel Pridal, Paul Boyd, Standford Gibson, John Hickey, Thomas Econopouly, and Larry Strong. 2018. Habitat Analyses for the Missouri River Effects Analysis. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Engineer Research and Development Center. https://usace.contentdm.oclc.org/utils/getfile/collection/p16021coll7/id/8074. Fischenich, J.C., Sara A. Reynolds, and Philip Halteman. 2021. Fort Peck EIS Alternative effects on pallid sturgeon: Model documentation and study report. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Omaha District. https://usace.contentdm.oclc.org/utils/getfile/collection/p16021coll7/id/8074.
Breakthrough curves from particle tracking simulations of a July 1, 2019, larval drift experiment on the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT
공공데이터포털
This dataset contains breakthrough curves calculated from particle tracking simulations of a July 1, 2019, larval drift experiment conducted on the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT. Breakthrough curves were generated using a custom script written in the Python programming language that counts the number of particles per time step passing through sampling locations. Breakthrough curves were generated for particles using passive, active75pct, and active60pct vertical movement methods at the first two sampling stations downstream of the release location.
Animations of particle tracking simulations of the July 1, 2019, larval drift experiment on the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT
공공데이터포털
This dataset contains animations of particle tracking of the July 1, 2019, larval drift experiment on the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT. Animations do not contain audio and depict particles moving from the top of the reach (left side) to the bottom of the reach (right side). A total of 9 animations are included with each corresponding to the combination of 1 of 3 vertical movement methods (active60pct, active75pct, or passive) and 1 of 3 lateral eddy viscosity scenarios (LEVx0p5, LEVx1, or LEVx2).
Hydraulic Model Archive and Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator (FluEgg) Results for Simulations of Invasive Carp Egg and Larval Drift in the Maumee River, Ohio (ver. 1.1, July 2023)
공공데이터포털
The U.S. Geological Survey simulated the drift and dispersal of invasive carp eggs and larvae in the Maumee River, Ohio, using the Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator (FluEgg) (Garcia and others, 2013; Domanski, 2020). The hydraulic inputs used in the FluEgg simulations were generated using a one-dimensional Hydrologic Engineering Center-River Analysis System (HEC-RAS) (version 5.0.7) model of the Maumee River (HEC-RAS, 2020). HEC-RAS simulations and FluEgg simulations were run for both steady and unsteady flow conditions. This data release contains an archive of the relevant files to document and run the HEC-RAS and FluEgg simulations of the Maumee River as well as the simulation outputs. Rerefences Cited: Garcia, T., Jackson, P.R., Murphy, E.A., Valocchi, A.J., Garcia, M.H., 2013, Development of a Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator to evaluate the transport and dispersion of Asian carp eggs in rivers: Ecological Modelling v. 263, p. 211–222. [Also available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2013.05.005.] Domanski, M.M., Berutti, M.C., 2020, FluEgg, version 4.1.1, U.S. Geological Survey software release, accessed August 2020, at https://doi.org/10.5066/P93UCQR2. Hydrologic Engineering Center-River Analysis System (HEC-RAS), 2020, accessed August 20, 2020, at https://www.hec.usace.army.mil/software/hec-ras/
Hydraulic Model Archive and Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator (FluEgg) Results for Simulations of Invasive Carp Egg and Larval Drift in the Maumee River, Ohio (ver. 1.1, July 2023)
공공데이터포털
The U.S. Geological Survey simulated the drift and dispersal of invasive carp eggs and larvae in the Maumee River, Ohio, using the Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator (FluEgg) (Garcia and others, 2013; Domanski, 2020). The hydraulic inputs used in the FluEgg simulations were generated using a one-dimensional Hydrologic Engineering Center-River Analysis System (HEC-RAS) (version 5.0.7) model of the Maumee River (HEC-RAS, 2020). HEC-RAS simulations and FluEgg simulations were run for both steady and unsteady flow conditions. This data release contains an archive of the relevant files to document and run the HEC-RAS and FluEgg simulations of the Maumee River as well as the simulation outputs. Rerefences Cited: Garcia, T., Jackson, P.R., Murphy, E.A., Valocchi, A.J., Garcia, M.H., 2013, Development of a Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator to evaluate the transport and dispersion of Asian carp eggs in rivers: Ecological Modelling v. 263, p. 211–222. [Also available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2013.05.005.] Domanski, M.M., Berutti, M.C., 2020, FluEgg, version 4.1.1, U.S. Geological Survey software release, accessed August 2020, at https://doi.org/10.5066/P93UCQR2. Hydrologic Engineering Center-River Analysis System (HEC-RAS), 2020, accessed August 20, 2020, at https://www.hec.usace.army.mil/software/hec-ras/
Model Archive and Results for Unsteady Simulations of Egg and Larval Drift in the Maumee River, Ohio
공공데이터포털
This page contains results from 304 Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator (FluEgg; version 4.1.1) simulations of invasive carp eggs and larvae in the Maumee River, Ohio, under unsteady flow conditions. FluEgg models the drift and dispersion of eggs and larvae in fluvial environments. The eggs develop, changing in size and density, and eventually hatch into larvae. The simulations end when the larvae reach the gas bladder inflation stage or when the set duration of the simulation is exceeded (whichever comes first). FluEgg requires the user to provide hydraulic data to drive the drift model. The hydraulic inputs for these FluEgg simulations were generated using a one-dimensional unsteady hydraulic model of the Maumee River (see the other child items of this data release for more information about the hydraulic model) for four unsteady flow periods in which grass carp eggs or larvae were collected on the Maumee River: July 11-14, 2017, June 11-14, 2018, June 22-27, 2018, and May 28-30, 2019. The upstream end of the model domain (0.0 river kilometers) is located 280 meters downstream from Independence Dam near Defiance, Ohio, and the downstream end of the model domain is the mouth of the Maumee River at Lake Erie near NOAA tidal gage 9063085 (95.6 river kilometers). In FluEgg, the hydraulic conditions at the downstream end of the model domain extend infinitely downstream to allow eggs and larvae to drift beyond the model domain. Therefore, any drift distances greater than 95.6 kilometers should be excluded from further analysis of these data. FluEgg simulations were first run in reverse using the reverse time particle tracking algorithm (RTPT) in FluEgg using the time, location, and developmental stage of 73 captured grass carp eggs and larvae as input. Accounting for replicates, a total of 28 FluEgg simulations were run in reverse for a single invasive carp species (grass carp). Because RTPT simulations result in distributions of potential spawning areas, a series of 276 iterative forward FluEgg simulations were run to further refine the likely grass carp spawning area for the 28 groups of eggs/larvae. Each simulation included 10,000 grass carp eggs, which were assumed to have been spawned at the water surface and at the midpoint of the channel. This page includes: --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_reverse_sim_list.csv: comma-separated values (csv) file listing the simulation parameters used for 28 unsteady FluEgg RTPT simulations (reverse) --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_forward_sim_list.csv: comma-separated values (csv) file listing the simulation parameters used for 276 unsteady FluEgg simulations (forward) --MaumeeRiver_centerline.KML: KML file of the Maumee River centerline that represents the model domain --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_reverse_output.zip: ZIP file containing Hierarchical Data Format 5 (HDF5) results files from 28 reverse FluEgg simulations with the naming convention Maumee_RTPT_RunX_10Kgc_TIMESTEPs.h5, where RunX is the run number (1 to 28) and TIMESTEPs is the simulation timestep in seconds. Each HDF5 file has a corresponding set of simulation parameters given in MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_reverse_sim_list.csv. --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_forward_output.zip: ZIP file containing Hierarchical Data Format 5 (HDF5) results files from 276 forward FluEgg simulations with the naming convention Maumee_FRunIteration_10Kgc_TIMESTEPs.h5, where FRunIteration is the forward simulation identifier (run number and iteration; F1a, F1b, F1c) and TIMESTEPs is the simulation timestep in seconds. Each HDF5 file has a corresponding set of simulation parameters given in MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_forward_sim_list.csv.
Model Archive and Results for Unsteady Simulations of Egg and Larval Drift in the Maumee River, Ohio
공공데이터포털
This page contains results from 304 Fluvial Egg Drift Simulator (FluEgg; version 4.1.1) simulations of invasive carp eggs and larvae in the Maumee River, Ohio, under unsteady flow conditions. FluEgg models the drift and dispersion of eggs and larvae in fluvial environments. The eggs develop, changing in size and density, and eventually hatch into larvae. The simulations end when the larvae reach the gas bladder inflation stage or when the set duration of the simulation is exceeded (whichever comes first). FluEgg requires the user to provide hydraulic data to drive the drift model. The hydraulic inputs for these FluEgg simulations were generated using a one-dimensional unsteady hydraulic model of the Maumee River (see the other child items of this data release for more information about the hydraulic model) for four unsteady flow periods in which grass carp eggs or larvae were collected on the Maumee River: July 11-14, 2017, June 11-14, 2018, June 22-27, 2018, and May 28-30, 2019. The upstream end of the model domain (0.0 river kilometers) is located 280 meters downstream from Independence Dam near Defiance, Ohio, and the downstream end of the model domain is the mouth of the Maumee River at Lake Erie near NOAA tidal gage 9063085 (95.6 river kilometers). In FluEgg, the hydraulic conditions at the downstream end of the model domain extend infinitely downstream to allow eggs and larvae to drift beyond the model domain. Therefore, any drift distances greater than 95.6 kilometers should be excluded from further analysis of these data. FluEgg simulations were first run in reverse using the reverse time particle tracking algorithm (RTPT) in FluEgg using the time, location, and developmental stage of 73 captured grass carp eggs and larvae as input. Accounting for replicates, a total of 28 FluEgg simulations were run in reverse for a single invasive carp species (grass carp). Because RTPT simulations result in distributions of potential spawning areas, a series of 276 iterative forward FluEgg simulations were run to further refine the likely grass carp spawning area for the 28 groups of eggs/larvae. Each simulation included 10,000 grass carp eggs, which were assumed to have been spawned at the water surface and at the midpoint of the channel. This page includes: --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_reverse_sim_list.csv: comma-separated values (csv) file listing the simulation parameters used for 28 unsteady FluEgg RTPT simulations (reverse) --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_forward_sim_list.csv: comma-separated values (csv) file listing the simulation parameters used for 276 unsteady FluEgg simulations (forward) --MaumeeRiver_centerline.KML: KML file of the Maumee River centerline that represents the model domain --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_reverse_output.zip: ZIP file containing Hierarchical Data Format 5 (HDF5) results files from 28 reverse FluEgg simulations with the naming convention Maumee_RTPT_RunX_10Kgc_TIMESTEPs.h5, where RunX is the run number (1 to 28) and TIMESTEPs is the simulation timestep in seconds. Each HDF5 file has a corresponding set of simulation parameters given in MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_reverse_sim_list.csv. --MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_forward_output.zip: ZIP file containing Hierarchical Data Format 5 (HDF5) results files from 276 forward FluEgg simulations with the naming convention Maumee_FRunIteration_10Kgc_TIMESTEPs.h5, where FRunIteration is the forward simulation identifier (run number and iteration; F1a, F1b, F1c) and TIMESTEPs is the simulation timestep in seconds. Each HDF5 file has a corresponding set of simulation parameters given in MaumeeRiver_unsteady_fluegg_forward_sim_list.csv.
Animations of particle tracking simulations of flows between 185-635 cms for two sub-reaches of the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT
공공데이터포털
This dataset contains two subsets of animations corresponding to particle tracking simulations of the Upper Missouri River near Wolf Point, MT comparing larval transport through the upper and lower sub-reaches of the larger model reach. Animations do not contain audio and depict particles moving from the top of the reach (left side) to the bottom of the reach (right side). A total of 96 animations are included corresponding to a combination of 1 of both reaches (upper or lower), 1 of 16 discharges (185-635 cms, at increments of 30 cms), and 1 of 3 vertical movement methods (active60pct, active75pct, or passive).