ORCID

Abstract

Animal-borne data loggers (ABDLs) or “tags” are regularly used to elucidate animal ecology and physiology, but current literature highlights the need to assess associated deleterious impacts including increased resistive force to motion. Previous studies have used computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to estimate this impact, but many suffer limitations (e.g., inaccurate turbulence modeling, neglecting boundary layer transition, neglecting added mass effects, and analyzing the ABDL in isolation from the animal). A novel CFD-based method is presented in which a “tag impact envelope” is defined utilizing simulations with and without transition modeling to define upper and lower drag limits, respectively, and added mass coefficients are found via simulations with sinusoidally varying inlet velocity, with modified Navier-Stokes conservation of momentum equations enforcing a shift to the animal's noninertial reference frame. The method generates coefficients for calculating total resistive force for any velocity and acceleration combination, and is validated against theory for a prolate spheroid. An example case shows ABDL drag impact on a harp seal of 11.21%–16.24%, with negligible influence on added mass. By considering the effects of added mass and boundary layer transition, the approach presented is an enhancement to the CFD-based ABDL impact assessment methods previously applied by researchers.

DOI

10.1111/mms.12540

Publication Date

2019-04-08

Publication Title

Marine Mammal Science

Volume

35

Issue

2

ISSN

0824-0469

Keywords

ABDL, added mass, animal-borne data loggers, bio-logging, boundary layer transition, CFD, computational fluid dynamics, hydrodynamics, tag, telemetry

First Page

364

Last Page

394

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