Literature DB >> 11697254

Understanding human impact on the Baltic ecosystem: changing views in recent decades.

R Elmgren1.   

Abstract

Grave environmental problems, including contamination of biota by organochlorines and heavy metals, and increasing deep-water oxygen deficiency, were discovered in the Baltic Sea in the late 1960s. Toxic pollutants, including the newly discovered PCB, were initially seen as the main threat to the Baltic ecosystem, and the impaired reproduction found in Baltic seals and white-tailed eagles implied a threat also to human fish eaters. Countermeasures gradually gave results, and today the struggle to limit toxic pollution of the Baltic is an international environmental success story. Calculations showed that Baltic deep-water oxygen consumption must have increased, and that the Baltic nutrient load had grown about fourfold for nitrogen and 8 times for phosphorus. Evidence of increased organic production at all trophic levels in the ecosystem gradually accumulated. Phosphorus was first thought to limit Baltic primary production, but measurements soon showed that nitrogen is generally limiting in the open Baltic proper, except for nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria. Today, the debate is concerned with whether phosphorus, by limiting nitrogen-fixers, can control open-sea ecosystem production, even where phytoplankton is clearly nitrogen limited. The Baltic lesson teaches us that our views of newly discovered environmental problems undergo repeated changes, and that it may take decades for scientists to agree on their causes. Once society decides on countermeasures, it may take decades for them to become effective, and for nature to recover. Thus, environmental management decisions can hardly wait for scientific certainty. We should therefore view environmental management decisions as experiments, to be monitored, learned from, and then modified as needed.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11697254

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ambio        ISSN: 0044-7447            Impact factor:   5.129


  20 in total

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Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 5.129

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Authors:  Mia Pihlajamäki; Nina Tynkkynen
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 5.129

5.  Impact of climate change on ecological quality indicators and biogeochemical fluxes in the Baltic sea: a multi-model ensemble study.

Authors:  H E Markus Meier; Bärbel Müller-Karulis; Helén C Andersson; Christian Dieterich; Kari Eilola; Bo G Gustafsson; Anders Höglund; Robinson Hordoir; Ivan Kuznetsov; Thomas Neumann; Zohreh Ranjbar; Oleg P Savchuk; Semjon Schimanke
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 5.129

6.  Has eutrophication promoted forage fish production in the Baltic Sea?

Authors:  Margit Eero; Helén C Andersson; Elin Almroth-Rosell; Brian R MacKenzie
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2016-05-12       Impact factor: 5.129

7.  Extremes of temperature, oxygen and blooms in the Baltic sea in a changing climate.

Authors:  Thomas Neumann; Kari Eilola; Bo Gustafsson; Bärbel Müller-Karulis; Ivan Kuznetsov; H E Markus Meier; Oleg P Savchuk
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 5.129

8.  Phosphorus chemistry and bacterial community composition interact in brackish sediments receiving agricultural discharges.

Authors:  Hanna Sinkko; Kaarina Lukkari; Abdullahi S Jama; Leila M Sihvonen; Kaarina Sivonen; Mirja Leivuori; Matias Rantanen; Lars Paulin; Christina Lyra
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-06-29       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Directional genetic selection by pulp mill effluent on multiple natural populations of three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus).

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Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2011-04-01       Impact factor: 2.823

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