The Baltic Sea marine system - human impact and natural variations
Abstract
The environmental state of the Baltic Sea system is influenced by both natural and anthropogenic factors. Water exchange with the adjacent ocean and within the system depend on large-scale atmospheric circulation and properties of the straits separating the different sub-basins. Physical processes control the stratification and determine residence times of water and dissolved substances, which has a major impact on the oxygen situation. Deep water oxygen demand is coupled to the production of organic material, which in turn depends on the availability of plant nutrients in the sunlit surface layer. Plant nutrients are supplied from external waterborne and airborne sources, but there is also an internal supply of remineralized nutrients from the deep water resulting from decomposition of organic material previously produced in the surface layer. In large areas of the system the contemporary rate of deep water oxygen consumption exceeds the rate of oxygen supply, resulting in oxygen poor water hostile to higher forms of life.
Mathematical models of the marine system are the only tools able to determine the relative importance of the many different factors that influence the Baltic Sea environmental state. Without a proper system understanding and attribution of detected threats to their dominant sources, it is not possible to determine the future effects of ecosystem management strategies. The work in this thesis is a part of the development of Baltic Sea modelling tools that can address several different ecosystem threats, and thus serve as support concerning management decisions. In this case the foci are on eutrophication, acidification and climate change. Reconstructions of the factors forcing the system are used to do hindcast simulations up to half a millennium back in time. The ecosystem changes on longer time scales are mainly attributed to anthropogenic fuelling of phytoplankton production as the result of a massive increase in nutrient supply during the twentieth century. Model results indicate that eutrophication may have damped the effect of increasing atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide on surface water pH. The reconstruction of the Baltic Sea past suggests that the physical forcing, which is related to climate variability, so far mainly affects the oxygen situation on an inter-annual to decadal basis whereas significant long-term trends coupled to climate change have not been detected.
Parts of work
Gustafsson, E. and Omstedt, A., 2009. Sensitivity of Baltic Sea deep water salinity and oxygen concentration to variations in physical forcing. Boreal Environment Research, 14, 18–30. Hansson, D. and Gustafsson, E., 2010. Salinity and hypoxia in the Baltic Sea since AD 1500. Submitted to Journal of Geophysical Research – Oceans. Omstedt, A., Gustafsson, E. and Wesslander, K., 2009. Modelling the uptake and release of carbon dioxide in the Baltic Sea surface water. Continental Shelf Research, 29, 870–885, ::doi::10.1016/j.csr.2009.01.006 Gustafsson, E., 2010. Modelled long-term evolution of particulate organic carbon flux to the Baltic Sea deep water. Submitted to Journal of Marine Systems.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten
Institution
Department of Earth Sciences ; Institutionen för geovetenskaper
Disputation
Klockan 10.00 i sal Stora Hörsalen, Geovetarcentrum, Guldhedsgatan 5A, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2010-10-01
erikg@gvc.gu.se
Date
2010-09-07Author
Gustafsson, Erik
Keywords
Baltic Sea
modelling
salinity
oxygen
nutrients
eutrophication
acidification
climate
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8159-7
ISSN
1400-3813
Series/Report no.
A
133
Language
eng