1. Introduction
Numerical ocean models have become increasingly valuable tools as we strive to understand the nature of an ocean’s dynamics. These models have been developed from more crude and idealized tools to capture much of the complexity of the real ocean [
1].
The application of numerical techniques for solving coastal problems by using models is a reliable, cost-effective, and time-saving tool (e.g., [
2]). Thus, the proper determination of the wave-parameter selection of the grid structures, advanced methods for conservation in highly nonlinear systems, inverse methods, and other ideas for modern ocean modeling stimulate interest. In this article, a different numerical model was applied to a complex solid reef wall at the Alburquerque Bank by using several steps to improve the accuracy of the numerical models (i.e., a model that had not been previously applied in studies of reef walls).
The Alburquerque Bank is an atoll of a total area of 63.8 km2 that is located between 12°08′–12°12′ N and 81°49′–81°54′ W, which is about 35 km SW of San Andrés Island in the San Andrés, Providence, and Santa Catalina Archipelago (SPSA), Colombia. This bank has a circular shape that encompasses a pre-reef terrace. The east–west diameter exceeds 8 km. The atoll has two cays (Cayo del Norte and Cayo del Sur or Pescadores), with a combined emerged area of 0.1 km2. Alburquerque is permanently occupied by military personnel, and it receives continuous visits from fishermen performing their fishing tasks.
Figure 1 shows the geographical location of the island.
Figure 2 is an aerial photograph of the island that shows the two emerged cays, the break zone, the waste sand bands from the break, and the internal lagoon. Because of its ecological relevance, the SPSA, including Alburquerque, was declared a biosphere reserve by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in the year 2000. This reserve is named “Seaflower” and it is the most extensive biosphere reserve in the world, with a surface area of 180.000 km
2 [
3]. This territory is also immersed in a legal dispute in which Nicaragua instituted proceedings against Colombia in 2001 before the International Court of Justice, which confirmed Colombia’s sovereignty over all of the islands in the archipelago, but drew maritime boundaries in favor of Nicaragua [
4].
The history of the island dates back to the end of the Triassic Period, which is about 80 million years ago, and it is related to the origin and formation of the Central American and Caribbean Sea elevation [
5]. The regional tectonic scheme of the seabed is characterized by fracture zones, the most conspicuous being the San Andrés bill. All the islands, atolls, and coral banks of the archipelago originated from volcanoes that are arranged along the tectonic fractures of the submarine crust, and that are predominantly oriented toward the NNE and SW.
The intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) dominates the climate over the San Andrés Islands, which modulates the direction and the intensity of the trade winds. These winds are characterized by great uniformity in their velocities. Temporal oscillations over weeks with the passage of cold fronts from the west, or with the passing of atmospheric waves from the east, produce seasonal oscillations. During the windy season, winds from the northeast (NE) and the east (E) predominate, with the infrequent occurrence of storm winds. The climate in Cayo Alburquerque is relatively dry and it follows the typical seasonality of the Western Caribbean, with a windy season from December to March, a transitional season until June, the “summer of San Juan” in July–August, and a rainy season from September to November [
6]. The trade winds are the prevailing direction of the winds in the archipelago area. The trade winds blow from the east–northeast (ENE) direction, with monthly average speed variations between 4m/s (May, September–October) and 7 m/s (December–January, July) [
7,
8], and with this being the regime that modulates the incident waves that we want to study, taking into account that Cayo Alburquerque is also in the path of hurricanes when their trajectories enter the Caribbean Sea [
9,
10].
In the dry and windy season, the ITCZ is located further south (0–5° S). Therefore, north winds dominate in this period, with an average speed of 8 m/s, and a daily maximum of 15 m/s. During the Veranillo, in July, winds reach speeds of up to 12 m/s. An increase in calm conditions at sea occurs during this transition period, before the start of the rainy season, as northeast winds inhibit precipitation.
During the wet season, from August to October, the intensity of the medium winds decreases substantially, but very strong showers, which are called “culoe’pollos”, are frequent. The decrease in the wind intensity causes the temperature to rise throughout the region.
The predominance of the trade winds throughout this region suggests, on the one hand, that coastal circulation, which is directly related to the amount of space surrounding the barrier reef, is the result of the shape of this barrier and its orientation. On the other hand, the wave regime plays an important role in the formation of this barrier. It seems, this interrelation would be impossible without considering wave-induced currents as one of the main mechanisms of the local circulation.
The interest in examining the variability in the waves of the Alburquerque Cay Islands is due to the fact that, since between 1961 and 1993, an increase of 1.8 ± 0.5 mm/year in the mean sea-level rise was registered, and, in the decade from 1993 to 2003, there was an increase of 1.3 ± 0.7 mm/year, which was caused by the global warming that was experienced by the planet [
11]. This report adds that, although this increase was not uniform, the trend is to increase in the long term. Several studies that were carried out in the Caribbean Sea have produced results with higher values, with major and potential effects on the coastal regions of the archipelago cays [
10]. This rise in the sea level means that the effect of the waves is increasingly important in the emerged parts of the low-lying islands, such as Alburquerque.
Because of their relatively low heights, it is known that the cays experience considerable changes in their morphologies, which are due to the retreat of their coastlines, as is found in Cayo Serranilla Island [
12] and Cayo Serrana Island [
13], which is due to the mean sea-level rise.
The Third National Communication determined that the Colombian ecosystems that are the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change would be those of high mountains, the coastline, and the Caribbean islands [
14], which is due to the low altitude of the cays of the archipelago of San Andrés, and to the combined action of the rise in the sea level and the increase in the cyclonic activity that is projected for the Colombian Caribbean. In general, the Cays, Banks and the islands of the archipelago are vulnerable to suffering the retreat of their coastlines, and even submergence above sea level, if the appropriate mitigation measures are not taken to deal with this problem, which is, in part, the object of the study.
There are reports of tropical storm tracks that influenced the adjacent waters of the cays, the most recent taking place in 1961 (Hattie), 1971 (Irene), 1988 (Joan), 1996 (Cesar), 1998 (Mitch), 1999 (Lenny), 2007 (Felix), and 2010 (Matthew), according to the United States National Hurricane Center [
15]. More recently, Hurricanes ETA and IOTA swept the archipelago, which produced vast devastation in the populated areas. The coral reefs have not been recently evaluated.
The estimates are tens of billion dollars as a result of increases in the hurricane frequency and the intensity in the Caribbean [
16]. According to the Colombian Third National Communication on Climate Change, the San Andres Archipelago possesses the greatest vulnerability in Colombia, having the highest risk values because of the threat that is perpetrated by hurricanes [
14].
The San Andres Archipelago has a population of 61,280, according to the 2018 census. Most people rely on the fisheries that have been created in the cays, including Alburquerque, which is just a few miles south of San Andres Island, although the sustainability of the coral-reef health is of the utmost necessity. Hurricanes arrive frequently, and the recent hurricanes ETA and IOTA affected the reef severely.
Moreover, the wave regime is changing. A climatic analysis of the waves of Alburquerque Island, based on NCEP–NCAR reanalysis made with data from 1948 to 2008, assessed the wave climatology in terms of the Hs12 and the mean flux energy direction. The authors of [
17] permitted the extrapolation of its behavior, and they show that the wave-energy mean-flux direction is changing anticlockwise, with tendencies of 1.91° in 2025, 5.75° in 2055, and 9.59° in 2085 [
10]. Such changes may have important effects on the reef sustainability.
Modeling the wave regime and the formation of the water circulation in the coral environment of the cays of Alburquerque Island was the objective of the present study. This document aims to understand the reef ocean dynamics and its direct relationship to the functioning of the ecosystem, since the significant energies that are involved should play a fundamental role in the coral and fish distributions in the coral reef.
The following section presents the hydrodynamic model that was used for the case study. In
Section 3.1, the wave climate is analyzed by using the results of a previous reanalysis, and
Section 3.2 presents the results of the wave and current modeling.
2. Materials and Methods
Let us consider that, in the dynamics of the study area, the induced currents in the waves play the greatest role and that the patterns of the induced circulation are stationary. To generalize the mathematical formulation, we introduce the orthogonal curvilinear coordinate system in unstructured meshes. By looking for the time average of the shallow-water equations in a 2-D approximation with rigid-lid surface conditions and by filtering the gravitational waves, the system of the resulting governing equations is as follows:
In a two-dimensional Ω domain with a sufficiently smooth boundary ∂Ω in the curvilinear coordinate system (ξ,χ), a Jacobian
I of nonzero, and limited transformation, we obtain:
The components Ui = Vei in Equations (1)–(3) are contravariant of the vector of the currents (V) with the basic contravariant vector (ei = ζi,), where ζi = (ξ,χ), and i = 1, 2 (the contravariant components of the tensor metric gik = ei ek; and , which are the Christoffel symbols of type II). Here, the chosen coordinate system is orthogonal; that is, gik = 0, i ≠ k; i, k = 1, 2 (the coordinates are Cartesian when g11 = g22 = 1).
The operation <…> in Equations (1)–(3) means that the temporal average is on a scale that is greater than the period of wind and tidal waves, and it applies to both the components (U
i (ξ,χ)) and the sea level (η (ξ,χ)). The other symbols are as follows: g: gravity; ρ: density of water; h, H: local and total depths, respectively (H = h + η); f: Coriolis parameter; T
1 and T
2: the respective components of τ
sx and τ
sy in the Cartesian plane (x,y) of the wind stress in the curvilinear coordinates; γ
U, γ
UV, and γ
V: expressions that parameterize the vertical structure of the flow [
18].
The term M
i was specifically introduced in Equations (2) and (3) to describe wave currents. These are radiative stress components that are produced by waves (wave-induced force per unit surface area (gradient of radiation stresses)) [
19].
The F
i term in Equations (2) and (3) is related to the bottom friction effects. In the case of wave dynamics, these terms are presented as recommended in [
20]. For the effect of currents, the quadratic law of friction applies. In the coupled form of these two effects, the formulas are linearized by employing an integral coefficient of the bottom friction (r). Thus, F
i = rU
i.
It is assumed that the variations in the sea level and the flows have been filtered, and, for this reason, Equation (1)—which is in curvilinear coordinates in terms of the average current—is presented in a quasi-divergent form (with an expansion of α). Equations (2) and (3) include the additional terms N
im (similar to α in Equation (1)), which do not have any physical sense (e.g., in the analogous comparison to Reynolds stresses), but are the products of mathematical operations. However, according to [
21], these terms are tidal stresses that express the contribution of long tidal waves to the residual circulation:
The subscript “m” in Equation (5) then represents the instantaneous-velocity components of the tide with the respective sea level.
To find the in-plane scalar vortex function, the covariant components gii = 1/gii are used. Taking advantage of the fact that Equation (1) is nondivergent in the (x,y) plane, the definition of the stream function (ψ) is introduced according to the following relationships:
Equations (5) and (6) include the tidal components. Nevertheless, under microtidal conditions with tidal currents of O (1–10) cm/s, the residual current velocities that are used in Equations (5) and (6) are less than 5–10% of the tidal currents. Thus, this effect is negligible, and it is analog to the wind-driven or thermohaline currents close to the barrier reef, where other physics should predominate, such as wave-induced currents. According to Equation (6), Continuity Equation (1) holds automatically. The rotation operation, which is applied to Equations (2) and (3) and multiplied by
gii, produces the vortex equation in terms of the stream function:
where the right-hand side is the following rotational equation:
The term
now also includes the correlations between the velocity and the instantaneous level:
The quasi-nonlinear terms L(U
i) can then be presented in the following way:
In the solid boundary (∂Ω
k), the impermeability conditions for the water flow were adjusted such that the flow that was perpendicular to the boundary was equal to zero. In terms of the stream function, this condition will be:
where N is the quantity of the continuous fragments of the solid boundary. If ψ = 0 is specified for one of the two cay islands, then the value ψ = Const ≠ 0 in the other must be calculated by using Equation (6) in the iterative process of Equation (7).
At open boundaries, the flow conditions for the stream function could differ, depending on the physical assumptions that are made about the flow. In general, the use of a numerical extrapolation from the calculation domain to the liquid boundary is recommended:
where j is the order of the derivative. Usually, extrapolations of the order 0 (j = 1) or the order 1 (linear, j = 2) are used.
For the calculation domain, we analyzed the available bathymetric data that were obtained by the echo sounder from the Colombian Caribbean Center for Oceanographic and Hydrographic Research (CIOH) and the LIDAR data, as processed by the United States Naval Oceanographic Office (Navoceano). These data were acquired with a spatial resolution of 4 m in waters with a depth of less than 50 m. Very high-resolution data, which were obtained from Navoceano, to describe the coral reef dynamics and the large distances (various kilometers) between the atolls, as well as the deep waters for the wave-climate conditions, are circumstances in which to employ nested grids with different spatial resolutions (
Table 1). The mesh-nest-formation process was completed by using the model in the three abovementioned calculation domains.
If the domain with the available echo-sounder data is approximately 20 × 20 km (
Figure 3), the selection criterion of the first mesh (the coarsest) is taken as a depth of 200 m for the deep-water limit. In this way, the first, second and third selected domains, as shown in
Figure 3,
Figure 4 and
Figure 5, are provided in the following UTM coordinates (
Table 1).
The wave climate was identified and applied in the deep waters in the contour of Domain 1 in the SWAN spectral wave model [
22,
23]. SWAN is a third-generation spectral wave model that is based on the wave-action-balance equation with sources and sinks. A 5-D wave spectrum, as an output, was used to provide the hydrodynamic model with the following information: the wave height and the wavelength, its mean and peak periods, the near-bed motion velocities for the bottom friction calculation, and the radiation stress tensor. The model configuration is as follows: The numerical scheme for the stationary mode was SORDUP [
22]. The bottom friction was defined by Collins [
24], and depth-induced wave-breaking and white-capping were set as the default [
25]. The frequency range was specified between 0.04 and 0.5 Hz, with 51 frequencies, and the spectral angular resolution was 3°. Finally, the width of the directional distribution of the incident wave energy was set to 31.5°.
The propagation was carried out from the first mesh, in a nested form, and up to a mesh with an 8 m × 8 m spatial resolution. Here, the third-generation SWAN spectral model provides inputs for the hydrodynamic model, with the abovementioned information.
4. Discussion
Coral barriers play a fundamental role in protecting the atoll space against wave action, according to the same physics as soft substrates. These barriers form sand bars that protect the coastline from erosion during storm events. However, the temporal dynamics of coral reefs and their developments occur over very long timescales, and they are not comparable to hydrodynamic processes that are related to the passage of tropical cyclones and cold fronts; these events are considered to be extremes in the Seaflower region. Therefore, the adaptation of a reef to abiotic environments must correspond to multi-year average conditions, and not to extreme conditions.
The databases that were used in this paper did not clearly or significantly reflect the passage of cyclones or frontal systems. Indeed, a wave reanalysis based on a previous atmospheric analysis was barely able to record the strong winds of a “squall” within the narrow strip of a cold front on the water. These winds were difficult to detect by using the spatial difference in the temperature and the wind direction. Since the purpose of this research was based on the assumed average wave regimes, the wave dynamics were associated with the influence of the trade winds. We determined that the average energy flow most likely comes from the ENE sector.
Clearly, the circulation over the islands is generally formed by the currents that are induced by waves as part of their mechanisms of breaking. Therefore, the research focus should be on this type of process, and it should omit wind-driven, thermohaline, and tidal currents. The applied hydrodynamic model indicated the bi-modal climate of water dynamics over the coral reef, which reveals that: (1) under the same wave-incidence angle, a circulatory system is formed (or not) along the barrier; and (2) there is a threshold for the wave height when slow circulation over the coral mounds locally transforms into a jet along the reef. Bi-modal circulation patterns should directly affect the coral larvae migration along the barrier or around the coral mounds, which produces more or less effects on the reef development. The existence of such a bi-modal form would be impossible on an impermeable coast, where changes to the regime depend on the angle of the incidence of the waves. This factor creates a difference between coral (semipermeable) and coastal environments.
The resolution of this particular case of circulation over coral reefs is fundamental for understanding the coral and fish distributions in these complex ecosystems that are the basis for the island’s population. These simulations also permit the assessment of scenarios that follow variable patterns that will be due to climate change in the future. Variations in the wave-climate conditions that are due to climate change may alter the reef formation.