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Climate-related Marine Ecosystem Change
Dippner, Joachim W. | Baltic Sea Research Institute Warnemünde | DE |
Vuorinen, Ilppo | University of Turku | FI |
LT | ||
Flinkman, Juha | Finnish Institute of Marine Research | FI |
Halkka, Antti | University of Helsinki | FI |
Köster, Friedrich W. | Technical University of Denmark | DK |
Lehikoinen, Esa | University of Turku | FI |
MacKenzie, Brian R. | Technical University of Denmark | DK |
Möllmann, Christian | University of Hamburg | DE |
Møhlenberg, Flemming | DHI - Water · Environment · Health | DK |
LT | ||
Schiedek, Doris | Baltic Sea Research Institute Warnemünde | DE |
Skov, Henrik | DHI - Water · Environment · Health | DK |
Wasmund, Norbert | Baltic Sea Research Institute Warnemünde | DE |
Date Issued | Start Page | End Page |
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2008-01-14 | 309 | 377 |
This chapter deals with climate-related changes in the marine ecosystem of the Baltic Sea. The Baltic Sea is often described as one of the world’s largest brackish water bodies. It has a unique combination of oceanographic, climatic, and geographic features. Most important in this context is: the sea is a nearly enclosed area having a water residence time of 30 years, due to restricted water exchange through the Danish Straits. It is situated in northern Europe and has, therefore, some arctic characteristics and a pronounced seasonality. It is affected alternately by continental and marine climatic effects. It has a catchment area approximately four times larger than the sea itself, while it is as the same time very shallow, with an average depth of only 56 m, having thus a relatively small water body. Seasonal vertical mixing of the water reaches a depth of 30–50 m and contributes to resuspension of nutrients and pollutants. In deeper parts, a permanent halocline appears, below which anoxia is common and interrupted only by major inflows of North Sea water.